New Mexico
Jeffrey Epstein’s New Mexico ranch now $6M less after year on market
Jeffrey Epstein’s New Mexico ranch, the place a few of his most monstrous allegations of sexual abuse occurred, is having a tough time touchdown a purchaser.
On Friday, the 7,500-plus-acre ranch, known as “The Zorro Ranch,” obtained a $6 million value reduce, The Publish can report.
Initially hitting the market final July for $27.5 million, the property is now on sale for $21.5 million.
Epstein reportedly had plans to make the ranch a “baby-making manufacturing unit” the place he would inseminate victims.
Through the years, a number of ladies got here out accusing the late disgraced New York-based investor of sexually abusing them there. Although he was by no means charged with a criminal offense in New Mexico, the compound has been painted as integral to his sex-trafficking operation.
Situated in Stanley, south of Santa Fe, the compound is made up of a three-story, four-bedroom primary home, a close-by caretaker’s residence and a number of different buildings, the itemizing notes. It additionally has one other individually and privately positioned residence and 4 different residences at Ranch Central, positioned close to the ranch entry space.
In the meantime, the lodge and log cabin are additionally positioned in their very own non-public location on the ranch.
Facilities embrace a grass air strip and hanger, horse stables, a fireplace home and a yurt.
Information obtained by The Publish reveal that Epstein had purchased the ranch again in 1993 from Gary King, who served as New Mexico’s thirtieth legal professional common on the time. The acquisition comprised non-public and leased federal lands.
After heightened allegations resurfaced in opposition to Epstein in 2019 regarding his involvement with minors, the state land commissioner ended the grazing deal.
“We’re formally canceling the leases with Zorro Ranch and Cypress Inc.,” State Land Commissioner Stephanie Garcia Richard instructed the native KRQE station on the time. “I’d by no means signal any lease agreements or contracts with such people as Jeffery Epstein or any of his co-conspirators.”
Laptop scientist and author Jaron Lanier claimed to the New York Occasions that he had beforehand spoken to a fellow scientist who revealed the convicted pedophile’s objective of getting at the least 20 ladies at a time impregnated on the ranch.
Epstein had hoped to make use of the $17 million property to impregnate numerous ladies and “seed the human race together with his DNA,” the New York Occasions reported. However regardless of this report, there isn’t a proof that Epstein had any kids.
In the meantime, when Epstein stayed on the ranch, safety was very tight.
“We needed to be escorted in on a truck with different workers, and, as soon as inside, we needed to put little hospital booties over our ft — and it was mandated that we’re escorted all over the place we went and use aspect entrances,” a contractor, who spoke on situation of anonymity, recalled. “About each three minutes somebody would come all the way down to regulate us whereas we have been working.”
In the meantime, his two Virgin Island properties, dubbed “pedophile island” stay on sale.
All the cash from the sale of his properties is predicted to enter resolving excellent lawsuits and the prices of the property’s operations, Daniel Weiner, an legal professional for Epstein’s property, beforehand instructed The Publish
Epstein died on the Metropolitan Correctional Heart on Aug. 10, 2019, in what his post-mortem decided was a suicide by hanging. He had been ordered held with out bail since his arrest July 6, 2019, at Teterboro Airport in New Jersey.
New Mexico
New Mexico lacks EV charging stations in rural and tribal areas
New Mexico
NMDOJ issues report on NMSU hazing case
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The New Mexico Department of Justice released a report on its investigation into alleged cases of sexual assault and hazing within the New Mexico State University men’s basketball program during the 2022-23 season.
The NMDOJ issued a report accusing the NMSU men’s basketball program of failing to protect student-athletes and having a “pervasive culture of misconduct,” leading to the cancellation of the season.
The report stems from an investigation into alleged hazing and sexual assault incidents within the NMSU men’s basketball program back then, which led to the cancellation of the season.
In April 2023, two players sued the school, players and coaches, accusing multiple players of sexually assaulting them multiple times over several months – and accusing the coaches of not stepping in. In November 2023, a grand jury indicted Deshawndre Washington, Kim Aiken Jr., and Doctor Bradley on criminal charges.
Bradley and Aiken each took a plea deal. Aiken agreed to testify against Washington as a part of his deal.
The NMDOJ blames the alleged assaults on an environment characterized by a toxic culture within the program. They allege people close to the team missed “opportunities to observe and intervene” and that student safety programs didn’t do enough “to deter or address this behavior.” They cited “lax oversight, inconsistent discipline, and inadequate preventative measures.”
“This report is intended to shine a light not only on the specific misconduct by members of NMSU’s basketball team but also the institutional deficiencies that allowed that misconduct to go unaddressed by leaders inside the university,” Attorney General Raúl Torrez said. “While NMSU has made commendable progress since these incidents occurred, more must be done to ensure accountability and prevent future harm.”
The NMDOJ called on NMSU to:
- Develop written guidelines for collaborations between athletics, institutional equity office and the dean
- Institute recurring Title IX and anti-hazing training for all students and staff
- Enforce “disciplinary measures for student-athletes based on the severity of misconduct”
- Strengthen standards for recruiting practices and coach and player vetting
- Ensure senior leadership “prioritizes and adequately funds” safety initiatives and programming
- Establish a center “dedicated to sexual violence education, prevention, and victim advocacy”
The NMDOJ is calling on the New Mexico Legislature to pass anti-hazing legislation. According to them, New Mexico is one of six states that lacks this.
They also identified seven critical areas of concern:
- Institutional governance and student engagement
- Policies
- Reporting mechanisms
- Training
- Athletics Department culture and recruiting practices
- Resources for sexual assault victims
- Interdepartmental coordination.
You can read the full NMDOJ report here.
Here is the letter the NMDOJ sent to NMSU:
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