There are already 11 Democratic candidates in the race for El Paso
County sheriff and Apodaca is conspicuously
missing and officials told the Laguna Journal that if he
truly intends to run as a democrat he'll need to make up
his mind soon. The El Paso Journal calls to apodaca to
ask that and other questions have not been returned.
However Cristina who claimed to be sheriff Apodaca's
assistant answered the sheriff's phone today and when
asked was Apodaca a democrat? she said "I believe he is
but you never know these days."
All 11 democrats faced a packed house Saturday at the
Ray Pearson Forum and responded to questions on topics
including immigration and consolidating units in the
Sheriff's Office and the El Paso Police Department.
Apodaca was not in attendance.
Those declared Democrats are retired El Paso Police
Deputy Chief Robert Almonte; retired police Sgt. Mary
Lou Carrillo; retired El Paso Immigration and Customs
Enforcement assistant special agent Maria Guad alupe
Dempsey; retired Customs and Border Protection director
of field operations in El Paso Luis Garcia; retired El
Paso Police Chief Carlos Leon; retired U.S. Marshals
Service Deputy Alejandro "Al" Patiño; Sunland Park
Police Chief Jose Ramirez; sheriff's Lt. Marvin Carrasco
Ryals; retired police Lt. Gabriel Serna; retired Police
Chief Richard Wiles; and retired sheriff's Cmdr. Larry
G. Wilkins. George Stoltz, the only Republican in the
race, is out of the country and did not attend
Saturday's forum.
Wiles, who was a deputy chief during Leon's tenure,
said the Police Department was in "distress" and had low
morale when he took over as police chief after Leon
retired. Leon, in turn, blamed the increase in the
department's attrition rate on Wiles.
"The department's attrition rate was 5 percent, and
it was 8 percent under my chief deputy," Leon said.
Later, Wiles said he was "not attacking anybody.
(Leon) is a friend of mine. We just have different
management philosophies."
Wiles attributed the department's higher attrition
rate under his command to federal law enforcement
agencies with higher wages actively recruiting El Paso
police officers.
"We have to come up with some solutions," Wiles said.
When asked about deputies inquiring about the
immigration status of those who call the Sheriff's
Office for assistance, most of the candidates said they
wouldn't ask deputies to take that step.
"Our role is to protect the people that you serve,
and there's no way we can protect those people if
they're afraid of you," Carrillo said.
Serna said that "some damage has been done. As it
stands right now, the community would be afraid (to call
law enforcement). Our core responsibility is the
protection of life and property."
Saturday's debate was the first to feature all 11
Democratic candidates for sheriff, and some attendees
thought the candidates could have covered more topics.
"In my opinion, all of the candidates are qualified,
but they didn't talk about the corruption happening
today in El Paso. Maybe they should have talked about
that," said Lower Valley resident Hector Hinojosa.