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Here we go I think with more fraternization. :-(
He's clearly not very original, is he?
Here we go I think with more fraternization. :-(
Lost both feeds--exactly the same time--multiple times. Color bars...
Why does the feed work during the breaks, but not during the actual testimony??
That is I think because some one let the laptop they are running the LiveWire from go to sleep. I can tell by the way they reset it on the laptop that we see.
Another Chavez paramour testifies
By Jeff Proctor / Journal Staff Writer on Tue, Jun 25, 2013
POSTED: 12:06 am
LAST UPDATED: 8:33 am
12:03 p.m.
BERNALILLOYet another of Levi Chavezs paramours took the witness stand in his murder trial this morning.
APD officer Regina Sanchez testified that she had known Chavez for years possibly since grade school when the two were growing up in Los Lunas.
After losing touch, the two reconnected in August or September of 2006 at APD headquarters Downtown, Sanchez testified. At the time, she was working for APD, and Chavez was working for Aviation Police, which essentially is a division of APD.
They exchanged telephone numbers and, in fairly short order, began an intimate dating relationship, according to Sanchezs testimony.
Then, in October 2006, Chavez moved in with Sanchez.
He brought possessions, clothes, a gun safe, (police uniforms,) hygienic items and his graduation photo either from Aviation or Rio Rancho Police Department, where he had worked previously, Sanchez said.
She testified that she knew Chavez had children and was married, but he told her he was separated and in the process of getting a divorce, she said.
Not long afterward, Sanchez said although she couldnt recall exactly when Chavezs wife, Tera Chavez, called Sanchez. Levi Chavez was present when the call came in.
Tera Chavez pretty much just got mad at me, Sanchez testified, adding that Tera was very angry.
Levi Chavez moved out a week or two later, Sanchez said from the witness stand, after she broke the relationship off.
Changing gears, lead prosecutor Bryan McKay showed Sanchez a photograph of an armoire that was taken inside the Chavezs home near Los Lunas the night in October 2007 that Levi called 911 to say Tera had shot herself in the head.
Hanging in the armoire were an APD uniform and an outer shell for a department-issued Kevlar bullet-proof vest.
Sanchez testified that APD field officers are required to wear their vests and uniforms during their shifts and that officers are issued only one uniform.
Both she and Chavez were field officers for APD in October 2007.
On cross-examination by Chavezs attorney, David Serna, Sanchez testified that back in the day, officers may have been issued more than one of the vest liners.
Earlier this morning, APD property supervisor Richard Campos testified that officers only are issued one vest and one uniform, but that they could buy additional vests for $700 or $800 of they wanted to.
The significance of Chavezs department-issued gear hanging in the armoire on the night he says he discovered his wifes body centers around the last time he says he was in the home prior to that discovery, which was around 9 p.m. on Sunday Oct. 21, 2007.
According to statements Chavez made to investigators, he hasnt been to the home since Friday morning Oct. 19. He worked a shift for APD that day and the following day, Saturday Oct. 20.
Chavez told investigators he had spent that Friday and Saturday night after his shifts ended at midnight with another of his paramours, then-APD officer Deborah Romero at her home in Albuquerques far Northeast Heights.
Prosecutors have introduced various other evidence and presented testimony to suggest Levi Chavez had been in his and Teras home at 11 Ash Place in the Las Maravillas subdivision that weekend.
Another of Levi Chavezs mistresses, Rose Slama, testified earlier in the trial that he told her he was getting out of the shower when he heard a bang, then discovered his wifes body.
And Aaron Jones, who was the lead detective who investigated Teras death for the Valencia County Sheriffs Office, testified that he noticed a damp towel in the bedroom where Tera died.
The weapon that killed Tera Chavez, according to testimony and evidence, was her husbands APD-issued Glock 9 mm pistol.
Chavez told investigators that he carried a personally-owned Kimber pistol on duty for APD.
That gun was in the trunk of his police car when VCSO deputies arrived at the Chavezess home the night Levi called 911.
APD officers are allowed to carry their own weapons on duty, provided they have passed qualification tests with those guns and received permission to use them for police work from APD brass.
Chavez told VCSO investigators they he had special permission from Police Chief Ray Schultz to carry the Kimber on duty.
According to documents filed by attorneys for Teras family in a civil wrongful death lawsuit against Levi Chavez, he had qualified to use the weapon but didnt have permission to carry it on duty.
That fact has not been disclosed during the murder trial.
Testimony in the murder trial will resume at 1:15 p.m. Expected on the witness stand are the doctor from the Office of the Medical Investigator who signed off on Teras autopsy and death certificate and a handwriting expert who examined two notes found at her death scene.
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