Taos County Sheriff's Deputy Fights His On Duty Buddies When He Resists Arrest

 


TAOS — Taos County sheriff’s Deputy Lorenzo Sanchez, 26, resigned this week after he was charged with 10 counts accusing him of using his patrol truck to strike a vehicle Saturday night on N.M. 68, attacking two men at a Taos residence and resisting arrest.

Sanchez faces three counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon; one count of battery on a peace officer; one count of aggravated DWI; two counts of resisting arrest; two counts of battery and one count of negligent use of a deadly weapon while intoxicated.

Sgt. Jason Rael wrote in a statement of probable cause that he arrived at the residence to find Sanchez bloodied and wearing a torn shirt. Sanchez said he had been involved in an argument with his girlfriend.

Sanchez smelled of alcohol and was having difficulty standing, Rael said. He conducted a field sobriety test on the deputy, who failed one of the exams and refused to take a Breathalyzer test.

Rael ordered Deputies Teddy Flores and Taylor Gwinn to take Sanchez into custody, but Sanchez resisted, according to the statement.

When Sanchez resisted a second time, a third deputy who arrived at the residence, Jose Garcia, shot him with a Taser, the statement said.

According to the court document, Sanchez’s girlfriend said she had called her mother and asked to be picked up at the deputy’s residence in Velarde after the couple had begun to argue.

After the woman’s brother and mother picked her up, Sanchez followed them in his county-owned Dodge Ram and used the truck to hit their vehicle, the statement said, adding the mother showed Rael a cellphone video of the deputy’s patrol unit striking their vehicle with its lights and sirens flashing.

The owner to the Taos residence told Rael he tried to “calm the situation down,” but Sanchez hit him in the face. A fight ensued between the two men and the girlfriend’s brother, he said.

Sanchez was taken to Holy Cross Medical Center before being incarcerated at the Taos County jail. He was arraigned Monday, and a preliminary hearing in his case is set for Oct. 20.

This isn’t the first time an argument between Sanchez and a girlfriend has resulted in criminal charges.

In June, a Rio Arriba County jury found him guilty of negligent use of a deadly weapon in connection with a domestic violence case filed in January 2019.

The incident involved a former fiancée, who testified in his defense at his trial and said she had given police some false statements in the case. The jury found him not guilty of more serious charges.

Sanchez, who was hired at the sheriff’s office in 2017, was placed back on active duty after the trial.

Court records also show he was charged in 2012 in Rio Arriba County with aggravated stalking and criminal damage to property. He was convicted of the latter charge and the former was dropped in a plea agreement that granted him a conditional discharge after he completed probation in 2014.


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