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Report released on Angel Fire-area kidnapping suspect




Photo Courtesy Taos County Crime Stoppers

Photo Courtesy Taos County Crime Stoppers

Posted Monday,  November 26, 2012  7:00 pm 

Eric Heinz The Sangre de Cristo Chronicle
A two-day manhunt for a man accused of kidnapping a woman at gunpoint ended when police found the suspect in the attic of a home south of Angel Fire, Thursday (Nov. 8) evening.
The suspect, 25-year-old Joseph Rodríguez, faces charges of kidnapping, fleeing police, tampering with evidence, two counts of residential burglary, conspiracy to commit residential burglary, breaking and entering, battery on a peace officer and criminal damage to property.
He is being held at the Vigil/Maldonado Detention Center in Ratón on $15,000 bond for nine felony counts.
Nov. 7
 


According to an affidavit for arrest warrant signed Nov. 10 by New Mexico State Police Officer Ryan Boone, Joanna Vanessa Martínez said in a police interview that Rodríguez asked her to drive him from the Days Inn hotel in Taos to El Prado at about 1:50 p.m. Martínez said she agreed, the affidavit states, and they drove to El Prado to pick up Qlarita Roybal, who had a cell phone with her. Roybal was later said to be Rodríguez’ girlfriend, Martínez said in the affidavit.
“After Ms. Roybal was picked up, Mr. Rodríguez instructed Ms. Martínez to drive to the car wash,” the affidavit states.
Taos police attempted to set up a traffic stop in order to arrest Rodríguez, who had an outstanding district court bench warrant issued by the Adult Probation & Parole division of the New Mexico Corrections Department.
Martínez told police that Rodríguez then said, “Drive, or I will shoot you,” the affidavit states.
Martínez led police into a pursuit through Taos Canyon, driving toward Angel Fire on U.S. Highway 64. Martínez said Rodríguez continued to yell at her during the pursuit, the document states.
At about 3:15 p.m., New Mexico State Police officer Ryan Gates noticed the gray 2005 Mazda that Martínez was driving.
“When Officer Gates got close enough to the vehicle to positively identify the registration, the vehicle (sped up to) 90 miles per hour and attempted to evade him,” the affidavit states.
Gates stated in the affidavit that the vehicle cut through a business parking lot at the intersection of U.S. Highway 64 and New Mexico Highway 434, traveling southbound. He also stated that the vehicle slowed down and sped up periodically while he was in pursuit.
Gates stated that he followed the vehicle near mile marker 27, “when the vehicle turned into a private driveway and ran into a gate.” Gates said he was able to identify Rodríguez as he exited the vehicle. Gates approached the vehicle and identified the driver as Martínez.
The affidavit later states the car Rodríguez was in ran out of gas while police were in pursuit.
According to the affidavit, Gates said he found Martínez but was unable to locate Rodríguez and the woman with him.
Nov. 8
During an interview, the affidavit states, Roybal said she and Rodríguez had broken into and spent the night at a home in Black Lake. The owner of the home, Yvonne Alire, said in an interview that numerous items including a purse, a Nintendo gaming system, a computer, a cell phone and some prescription medication had been stolen that night, the affidavit states.
The affidavit states that Rodríguez and Roybal used a cell phone that night to contact family members “in an attempt to flee the area and evade law enforcement.” Gates said during his investigation that Rodríguez had told his father, Joseph Rodríguez, Sr., that he “will not go back to jail,” the affidavit states.
Gates also learned during a conversation with Rodríguez’ mother that he had a firearm, the affidavit states. It was at this time that law enforcement deemed Rodríguez had probable cause to be a threat to law enforcement, it states.
Sometime between the night of Nov. 7 and the morning of Nov. 8, Rodríguez made his way to another home in Black Lake where his mother, Annabelle Rodríguez, was living, the affidavit states. At one point, Rodríguez kicked a hole in the wall between the two residences in order to gain access to an attic, it states.
Sometime during Nov. 8, Rodríguez was found by New Mexico State Police officers who closed in on the duplex with canine units, the affidavit states. After releasing canines into the home, it states, Rodríguez assaulted one of the canine officers.
New Mexico State Police public information officer Robert McDonald said that after the dogs had sniffed Rodríguez out, he came out of the attic and gave up.
Roybal was found with Rodríguez and interviewed by police.
Aftershock
 


At about 2:45 a.m. Friday (Nov. 9), police officers combed the house where Rodríguez was found in search of evidence, and they discovered a purse with Alire’s name on a credit card.
Police stated in the affidavit that they had not been able to find a firearm, which led to the “tampering with evidence” charge.
Alire told the Sangre de Cristo Chronicle that her and her boyfriend’s children will not go back into their house because they are afraid.
Alire said she assumed the suspect was in her home Nov. 8 because her window blinds were closed.
“They said they were going to check it, and around 7 p.m. that evening, they said that the home was cleared, but we were too scared to go home that night,” Alire said.
Alire said she has been trying to calm down the four girls she and her boyfriend look after. They range in age from 3 to 15.
“I’ve told my children that we’re trying to find a new home, but we’ve had no luck, so we have to go home,” Alire said. “They started crying. They said, ‘We don’t want to go back there,’ and I told them I don’t either, but we have no choice.”
Alire said she brought the girls back to the home on Sunday (Nov. 11), but the children walked to the back bedroom one time before running back to the car. Although Alire works in Angel Fire, she said her family has been rooming with her boyfriend’s parents in Cimarron since Nov. 8.
“I just barely got (the girls) to sleep in their own rooms this summer,” Alire said. “Before then they all shared a room. They don’t feel safe. I’m just going to try to talk them through it.”
Alire said she plans to install big, motion-activated lights and an alarm system in her home, whether that happens to be in Black Lake or elsewhere.

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