New Mexico
AFR: 12 cats rescued from house fire in NE Albuquerque
Investigators are looking into how a fire started at an Albuquerque home with more than a dozen cats inside.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – Investigators are looking into how a fire started at an Albuquerque home with more than a dozen cats inside.
The fire happened at a home on San Jacinto Avenue around 9 p.m. Sunday. That’s about a block from Manzano High School.
Fire crews were able to get the fire under control quickly, but there’s extensive damage.
Albuquerque Fire Rescue says there were no injures to any people, but firefighters found many cats inside the home.
12 of them got treatment and survived, but they couldn’t save the others.
AFR is calling the fire an accident.
New Mexico
New Mexico elementary school partners with NASA and earns elite STEM certification
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New Mexico
New Mexico ‘imposter nurse’ could face up to 100 years in prison if convicted
LAS CRUCES, N.M. — An ‘imposter nurse’ in Las Cruces is facing 34 charges after nearly causing the death of a patient and illegally giving medications to patients under 18 years old.
A Doña Ana County grand jury indicted Margarita Gonzalez. She is accused of assuming the identities of nurses in Texas to get hired at four nursing facilities in Las Cruces:
- Village at Northrise
- Las Cruces Wellness and Rehabilitation
- Peak Behavioral Health
- Matrix Home Care
The New Mexico Department of Justice’s Medicaid Fraud and Elder Abuse Bureau investigated and discovered instances where Gonzalez illegally gave injections and dispensed prescriptions, including narcotics to eight inpatient residents under 18 years old.
An investigation also found Gonzalez was also about to allegedly give “an incorrect insulin dose” to a patient that they claim could’ve killed the patient if another nurse hadn’t caught the error.
Several facilities fired Gonzalez over patient safety concerns and an observed lack of knowledge.
“Impersonating a healthcare provider is a reckless and selfish crime that subjects those most vulnerable to risk of serious injury or death,” Attorney General Raúl Torrez said. “I will not tolerate those who risk the safety of patients or cause danger and unnecessary confusion within the healthcare system. These charges should keep anyone attempting to pose as a healthcare provider on notice: we will find you, and we will prosecute you to the fullest extent of the law to protect New Mexicans.”
Gonzalez’s charges include identity theft, nursing without a license, abuse of a resident, distribution of controlled substances to a minor and fraud totaling over $25,000.
If convicted on all counts, Gonzalez could face up to 100 years in prison.
New Mexico
Longtime Northern Northern New Mexico priest helped rebuild Questa church
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