New Mexico
Family Feud: Cousin Claims Legislator Voted In New Mexico While Living In Wyoming
A former member of the Wyoming Legislature has filed an ethics complaint on his cousin and current state Rep. Tamara Trujillo, R-Cheyenne, for voting in New Mexico elections while living in Wyoming.
In his complaint filed Monday, Cheyenne resident John Romero-Martinez accuses Trujillo of voting in New Mexico prior to becoming a Wyoming legislator, but while she was actively living in the Cowboy State.
Trujillo, a first-term legislator, defeated Romero-Martinez in the 2022 House District 44 Republican primary and then beat Democrat Sara Burlingame in the general election.
In his complaint submitted to House Speaker Albert Sommers, R-Pinedale, Romero-Martinez implores Sommers to consider the “virtue of justice and mercy regarding the crystal-clear evidence that has been provided.”
He accuses his cousin of making false declarations or false assestations about her residency to vote in an out-of-state election. Romero-Martinez also cites a federal law prohibiting any member of the legislative branch from making materially false, fictitious or fraudulent statements or representations, but Trujillo had not been elected at the time she cast her New Mexico votes.
Romero-Martinez had little to say about his ethics complaint beyond citing a quote from Catholic Archbishop Fulton Sheen, who said: “Moral principles do not depend on a majority vote. Wrong is wrong, even if everybody is wrong. Right is right, even if nobody is right.”
What Did She Do?
In his complaint, Romero-Martinez provides New Mexico election record evidence showing that Trujillo voted in New Mexico from 2009-2019 while she was actively living and working in Wyoming. In an interview with Cowboy State Daily, Trujillo did not dispute this.
Trujillo had previously lived in New Mexico full-time but moved back to Wyoming in 2007 after she had a child and to work at the HF Sinclair refinery in Cheyenne. According to her LinkedIn profile, Trujillo worked this job until 2020.
The records show Trujillo voted in New Mexico elections in 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2018 and 2019, most of the time voting by absentee ballot.
The Reasoning
Trujillo gives two main reasons for why she voted in New Mexico while working and living in Wyoming.
During that time and currently, Trujillo said she owns property with water rights in Mora County, New Mexico, that she had inherited through her family. She also has an extensive family there and frequently travels back to the state and stays with her relatives.
Trujillo said she only rented homes in Cheyenne during this time and had always expected to move back to New Mexico within 10 years.
“My vested interest was based out of New Mexico,” she said.
Trujillo also said she was open about voting in New Mexico at the time despite helping with certain Wyoming political campaigns.
“So, I would always push politics here for conservatives,” she said. “That’s just how I was raised, you have to be involved one way or another.”
Trujillo, who has one of the most conservative voting records in the Wyoming Legislature, was registered as a Democrat in New Mexico as of 2022 when Romero-Martinez did his records request.
It wasn’t until she bought a home in Cheyenne and started having grandchildren in Wyoming did Trujillo become more committed to Wyoming and interested in its politics, she said.
No allegations have been brought that she voted in both states.
“There’s nothing illegal about what I did, and I didn’t vote in Wyoming and New Mexico at the same time,” she said.
When Trujillo was moved to a new voting district as a result of redistricting changes in 2022, she looked at the other choices on the ballot of Romero-Martinez and Burlingame, a former legislator, and decided to run.
“I cannot even believe John won an election in the first place, but he won because the Republicans didn’t want Sara in there,” Trujillo said. “I didn’t want John to represent me, so I ran.”
She describes Romero-Martinez’s investigation into her voting record as “very stupid,” and that she expects him to run against her to regain his seat this fall.
What Qualifies Residency?
New Mexico law defines residency as “the residence of a person is that place in which his habitation is fixed, and to which, whenever he is absent, he has the intention to return.” It also states that a person does not gain residency in the state if it is “a place to which he comes for temporary purposes only.”
To vote in New Mexico, one must maintain an active driver’s license.
But it’s not mandatory in New Mexico for people to have a “permanent home” to register to vote. A resident can provide an alternative description of his or her residence, even if they are experiencing homelessness, as long as it enables the authorities to identify and assign a voting precinct to them.
What Will Happen?
The allegations made against Trujillo are for actions that took place outside the legislative body and before she took office. Current ethics rules only apply to legislative misconduct and do nothing to address infractions committed outside of the body.
Still, Romero-Martinez wants Sommers to consider taking action on the matter, which could possibly include removing Trujillo from office.
According to a recent Legislative Service Office memo, over the dozen years in which the current ethics complaint rule has been in effect, no complaints have advanced to the point where a special committee was formed to conduct an investigation about a lawmaker.
“How is this going to look in the history books that we keep letting people go with crimes?” Romero-Martinez questioned. “Why would young people want to get involved with politics if they keep seeing all this crime and corruption?”
Trujillo said Romero-Martinez is “unstable” and has been performing additional investigations on her family members in New Mexico.
“At the end of the day, truth is always the best way to go and I haven’t lied about anything,” Trujillo said. “I’m out here just trying to represent the people, trying to learn the ins and outs of government so I can get something for my district.”
Leo Wolfson can be reached at Leo@CowboyStateDaily.com.
New Mexico
Governor asks AG to investigate DEA agents over fentanyl in New Mexico
SANTA FE, N.M. – Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham asked Attorney General Raúl Torrez to investigate whether any Drug Enforcement Administration agents broke state law when pills reached New Mexico streets.
In a statement, Lujan Grisham said, “make no mistake: the DEA knew people would die if these pills made it into New Mexico communities.”
The governor also shared a timeline from 2022 to 2025 that she said shows when she asked federal officials for help with New Mexico’s fentanyl crisis and violent crime.
Lujan Grisham said the first request came on June 21, 2022, when she wrote to then-Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher Wray and asked for 50 additional federal agents.
She said she wrote to then-Attorney General Merrick Garland on Sept. 15, 2022, asking for more agents, resources and support for New Mexico law enforcement.
Lujan Grisham said she wrote Garland a second time on Aug. 8, 2023, with the same request.
What came next?
About a month later, Lujan Grisham said she sent Garland a third letter and said New Mexico needed more federal law enforcement to curb violent crime, drug trafficking and human trafficking.
She said her most recent request came on Sept. 4, 2025, when she wrote to former Attorney General Pam Bondi and again asked for additional agents and resources.
The governor’s statement says those requests span several years as she pressed the federal government for more help in New Mexico.
Full statement from Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham:
“I am appalled by reporting this week by the Associated Press and Albuquerque Journal that revealed federal authorities made a deliberate decision to let hundreds of thousands of fentanyl pills flood into New Mexico communities, despite knowing that fentanyl is so lethal the White House has designated it a weapon of mass destruction.
Let me say that again: the Drug Enforcement Administration watched as 74,000 fentanyl pills were delivered to a mobile home park in Albuquerque, and they did nothing. And that’s just one transaction. Shockingly, the federal government stood by while monitoring shipments, tallying exact pill counts, and watching as these deadly drugs hit the streets.
There are no words to describe how reckless and dangerous these decisions were. Make no mistake: the DEA knew people would die if these pills made it into New Mexico communities, and the agency let it happen anyway. The result: hundreds of New Mexican parents burying their kids. Hundreds of New Mexican kids growing up without stable parents. All while the federal government stood by.
If the justification for letting these pills flood our communities was that it would somehow make New Mexico safer down the road through bigger eventual busts, the results say otherwise. New Mexico now leads the nation in the increase in overdose deaths for the second straight year, despite deaths dropping nationwide.
Today, I wrote to Attorney General Raúl Torrez and asked him to investigate whether any federal agents broke state law when they allowed lethal drugs to remain on our streets, and to prosecute anyone responsible — regardless of whether they are a federal agent or not.
I have spent years working across two administrations — writing letters, traveling to Washington, meeting directly with President Joe Biden and his cabinet, pushing for accountability, asking for more federal agents to be deployed to New Mexico to help fight this crisis.
- On June 21, 2022, I wrote to FBI Director Christopher Wray, imploring the FBI to assign no less than 50 additional agents to New Mexico to stem escalating drug trafficking and violent crime.
- On September 15, 2022, I wrote to Attorney General Merrick Garland, requesting that the Department of Justice provide additional federal agents, resources and support to New Mexico law enforcement. We asked the department to match the level of investigative, analytical, and technical resources the FBI had deployed in its Buffalo, NY surge.
- On August 8, 2023, I wrote again to Attorney General Garland, renewing my request that the DOJ expeditiously assign more federal agents to New Mexico.
- On September 7, 2023, I wrote to Attorney General Garland for a third time, reiterating my request once more federal law enforcement support to curb violent crime, drug and human trafficking.
- On September 4, 2025, I wrote to Attorney General Pam Bondi, once again requesting additional agents and resources.
I have declared the surge of drugs like fentanyl to be a public health emergency. I have deployed the National Guard to both Albuquerque and Española. While my administration was doing everything we could to stem the tide of fentanyl coming into our state, the federal government deliberately allowed it to flood in.
New Mexican lives are not the federal government’s cost of doing business.
I plan to hold the federal government accountable for this disaster and will explore every possible avenue of action against the federal government to right these wrongs.”
New Mexico
Canyon Venado Fire near Clines Corners grows to 852 acres, I-40 reopened
The Canyon Venado Fire has grown to 852 acres east of Clines Corners and crews say wind farms in the area are threatened.
CLINES CORNERS, N.M. – The Canyon Venado Fire has grown to 852 acres east of Clines Corners and crews say wind farms in the area are threatened.
The fire is burning just east of Clines Corners, south of Interstate 40.
It forced the closure of eastbound Interstate 40 at Clines Corners on Tuesday night. I-40 reopened Tuesday night. I-40 is back open but smoke still affects visibility.
“We’re on the side of I-40 so drivers have to be pretty cautious. As far as our establishment itself we’re pretty isolated by the freeway itself as a nice fire break,” said Lincoln Tarantino, Clines Corner general manager.
The fire has burned around 852 acres, up from just 20 at this time Monday.
Crews say the fire is not contained and wind farms in the area are threatened.
New Mexico
Feds allowed millions of fentanyl pills to ‘walk’ on New Mexico streets: DEA Whistleblower
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