Attorney General of New Mexico

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Attorney General of New Mexico
Incumbent
Raúl Torrez
since January 1, 2023
Term lengthFour years
Formation1912
WebsiteAttorney General of New Mexico

The attorney general of New Mexico, an elected executive officer of the state, oversees the New Mexico Attorney General's Office and serves as head of the New Mexico Department of Justice.

The officeholder, who is required to be a licensed attorney, is fifth in succession to the office of Governor of New Mexico, after the Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico, Secretary of State of New Mexico, President pro tempore of the New Mexico Senate and the Speaker of New Mexico House of Representatives.

The attorney general of New Mexico functions as the state's

consumer advocate and guardian of the public interest
.

Statutory responsibilities

The officeholder represents the state before any courts or agencies when the public interest requires or when requested by the Governor and prosecutes and defends all causes in the New Mexico Supreme Court, New Mexico Court of Appeals, or any other court or tribunal in which the state is a party or is interested. The New Mexico Attorney General prosecutes and defends all actions and proceedings involving any state employee in their official capacity, as well as may represent residential or small business consumers before the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission.

Upon request, the AG will provide written legal opinions to the legislature, any state official, or any district attorney on any subject pending before one of these officials. In matters involving the state Election Code the AG provides legal assistance to the Secretary of State of New Mexico.

The AG drafts contracts, bonds, and other instruments as required for use by the state.

At the governor's direction, the AG may attend and assist in the trial of any indictment or information in any county of the state. When a District Attorney fails or refuses to act, the AG may act on behalf of a county in any criminal or civil case.

In matters of the impeachment of a state legislator or employee, the AG initiates conflict of interest enforcement actions. The AG also prosecutes removal proceedings against district attorneys.

The AG establishes and maintains a register of all documents filed by charitable organizations and makes it available for public inspection.

List of New Mexico Attorneys General

Parties

  Democratic (29)   Republican (3)

# Image Name Took office Left office Party Years in office
1 Frank W. Clancy 1912 1916
Republican
5[note 1]
2 Harry L. Patton 1917 1918
Democrat
2
3 Oscar O. Askren 1919 1920
Democrat
2
4 Harry S. Bowman 1921 1922
Democrat
2
5 Milton J. Helmick 1923 1924
Democrat
2
6 John W. Armstrong 1925 1926
Democrat
<2[note 2]
7 Fred E. Wilson 1926 1926
Democrat
<1[note 3]
8 Robert C. Dow 1927 1928
Democrat
2
9 Miguel A. Otero III 1929 1930
Republican
2
10 Ernest K. Neumann 1931 1934
Democrat
4
11 Frank H. Patton 1935 1938
Democrat
4
12 Filo Sedillo 1939 1940
Democrat
2
13 Edward P. Chase 1941 1944
Democrat
<4[note 4]
14 Clyde C. McCullough 1944 1948
Democrat
<5[note 5]
15 Joe L. Martínez 1949 1952
Democrat
4
16 Richard H. Robinson 1953 1956
Democrat
4
17 Fred M. Standley 1957 1958
Democrat
2
18 Frank B. Zinn 1959 1959
Democrat
<1[note 6]
19 Hilton A. Dickson, Jr. 1959 1960
Democrat
<2[note 7]
20 Earl E. Hartley 1961 1964
Democrat
4
21 Boston E. Witt 1965 1968
Democrat
4
22 James A. Maloney 1969 1970
Democrat
2
23 David L. Norvell 1971 1974
Democrat
4
24 Toney Anaya 1975 1978
Democrat
4
25 Jeff Bingaman 1979 1982
Democrat
4
26 Paul G. Bardacke 1983 1986
Democrat
4
27 Harold Stratton 1987 1990
Republican
4
28 Tom Udall 1991 1998
Democrat
8
29 Patricia A. Madrid 1999 2006
Democrat
8
30 Gary King 2007 2014
Democrat
8
31 Hector Balderas 2015 2022 Democrat 8
32 Raúl Torrez 2023 Incumbent Democrat 1
Source:[1]
  1. ^ Since the first state election was in an odd-numbered year (1911), the term lasted five years.
  2. ^ Died while in office
  3. ^ Appointed by Governor Hannett in 1926
  4. ^ Resigned in 1944.
  5. ^ Appointed by Governor Dempsey in 1944.
  6. ^ Resigned in 1959.
  7. ^ Appointed by Governor Burroughs in 1959.

References

  1. ^ State of New Mexico (July 2012). Kathryn A. Flynn (ed.). 2012 Centennial Blue Book (PDF). Diana J. Duran. Office of the New Mexico Secretary of State. pp. 227–229. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2013-04-06.

External links