FROM THE ARCHIVE
N.M. law allows sharing of tribal DWI records
Facebook Twitter Email
MONDAY, APRIL 14, 2003

New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson (D) signed into law a bill that allows sharing of traffic records between tribes and the state.

The law authorizes tribes to enter into individual agreements. Based on the information, the state can use tribal convictions in state court.

Some tribes already share their records. Recent drunk-driving cases, however, have prompted calls for tribes to be more open.

Get the Story:
New law lets state, tribes share DWI records (AP 4/14)

Related Stories:
Navajo Nation president tackles DWI on reservation (02/25)
Editorial: Tribe should share records (12/18)
State wants tribal DWI records (11/20)
BIA says it is reforming driver policy (11/11)
Report: Tribal DUI record unreported (10/25)
Navajo man faces charges of manslaughter (10/22)
Motorist charged for reservation crash (10/17)
BIA hit with $37M lawsuit over deaths (09/19)
BIA facing $110M in lawsuits for deaths (8/27)
Ex-BIA employee to appeal DUI sentence (8/23)
Ex-BIA employee sorry for fatal crash (8/14)
BIA aware of employee driving record (4/29)
BIA employee to plead guilty for deaths (4/9)
Lawsuits pending over BIA workers (3/14)
BIA employee indicted on new charges (2/15)
BIA policies on drivers scrutinized (2/11)
Report: BIA helped employee (2/8)
BIA said unaware of employee record (2/4)
BIA employee in custody over crash (2/1)
In hospital, BIA employee faces charges (1/29)
Another Interior employee in deadly crash (1/28)