New Mexico judge rules protest shooter face trial
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[October 14, 2023]
By Andrew Hay
TIERRA AMARILLA, New Mexico (Reuters) -A New Mexico judge on Friday
found probable cause to try a counter protester for attempted murder for
shooting a Native American activist at a protest over plans to reinstall
the statue of a 16th century Spanish colonial ruler.
Ryan Martinez, 23, of Sandia Park, New Mexico, was charged for the Sept.
28 shooting of Jacob Johns, 42, of Spokane, Washington, who remains in
critical condition in an Albuquerque, New Mexico hospital.
New Mexico District Court Judge Jason Lidyard said Martinez provoked
protesters by repeatedly trying to enter an area where they were
celebrating postponement of the statue's installation following protests
against it.
He granted the prosecution's request Martinez remain in jail pending
trial, citing concerns about his social media posts advocating violence
against the U.S. Federal Reserve, his possession of a fully-automatic
rifle and complaints he walked around his community armed with an AR-15
and pistol, wearing body armor.
The case may now go to a jury trial.
The shooting marked the latest violence around statues of Juan de Onate
erected in the 1990s to commemorate the 400th anniversary of the arrival
of Spaniards.
The statue was removed in 2020 from just north of Espanola during
nationwide anti-racism protests and was to be reinstated at a county
complex in the town.
Nicole Moss, Martinez’s lawyer, said protesters took objection to the
red hat he was wearig with the Donald Trump slogan "Make America Great
Again." She said he was peacefully taking photographs when he was pushed
and attacked by protesters causing him to "panic" and pull out a
handgun.
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Ryan Martinez, charged with attempted murder for the alleged
shooting of Native American climate activist Jacob Johns at a
protest against the installation of a statue of a Spanish
conquistador, appears at a court hearing at Rio Arriba County
Courthouse in Tierra Amarilla, New Mexico, U.S., October 13, 2023.
REUTERS/Andrew Hay
“He fired one shot at Mr. Johns in self-defense," Moss said.
Prosecutors said the shooting was "calculated," Martinez having an
extra magazine of ammunition in his pants waistband along with a
handgun.
Prior to the shooting Martinez told a police officer and protesters
to “fuck off” when they approached him, Rio Arriba County Sheriff’s
Deputy Steve Dennis testified.
Protest organizer Mateo Peixinho said he asked Martinez prior to the
shooting why he had come to the event.
"He said he was frustrated and angry at the county commissioners for
allowing a few Indian protesters to stop them from doing what they
needed to do," said Peixinho.
Onate monuments have long outraged Native Americans and others who
decry his brutal 1598 colonization.
Some descendants of Spanish colonial settlers, known as Hispanos,
say Onate should be celebrated as part of New Mexico's Hispanic
heritage.
(Reporting by Andrew Hay in Tierra Amarilla, New MexicoEditing by
Donna Bryson, Rod Nickel, Matthew Lewis and Lincoln Feast)
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