Republican shooter wanted to lock election officials in Guantánamo Bay

Republican Solomon Pena

The failed Republican candidate accused of plotting drive-by shootings at homes of Democrats previously called for locking up election officials in Guantánamo Bay and promoted absurd conspiracy theories about solar power, feminism, and “the demonic theories of the Globalist Elites.”

Yet powerful New Mexico Republican Party leaders not only gave Solomon Peña full-throated endorsements, but they also financed his hopeless legislative campaign in central Albuquerque.

Pena had been demoted twice by the U.S. Navy and he spent nearly seven years in prison for burglary. Some GOP leaders knew about his prison record but said they believed that he had turned his life around.

Local and state authorities are investigating whether drug money helped fund Pena’s campaign.

“He came across to me as a very respectful, thoughtful young man,” said lawyer, real estate developer, and oil mogul Harvey E. Yates Jr., a former national committeeman for the Republican Party of New Mexico and New Mexico Republican Party chair, who donated $5,000 to Peña’s campaign. Now, Yates says he may have made a mistake. He said that he felt “very bad, very sad” for Peña, “who I think really had possibilities.”

Police say that after losing his race by a landslide in November — he received 26% of the vote — and refusing to concede, Peña organized shootings at the homes of prominent Democrats, including two who certified the election results.

The attacks came at a time of growing fears nationwide about a trend of political violence, mostly from the right wing, including the attack on the husband of then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a conspiracy to kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and the mob attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

In New Mexico, the case also highlights the internal struggles among Republicans as election deniers such as Peña — who was in the crowd for President Donald Trump’s speech in Washington on Jan. 6, according to videos collected by online sleuths — fill the ranks of candidates seeking elected office.

Other Republicans such as Audrey Trujillo, who ran for secretary of state in New Mexico, embraced conspiracy theories about elections, school shootings, and COVID-19 vaccines.

Many election deniers lost in New Mexico, mirroring similar Republican setbacks in other parts of the country.

The results helped the state’s Democrats solidify their control of both houses in the state Legislature, the governor’s office, and the entire congressional delegation, sparking recriminations over Republicans’ loss of power.

Michael Candelaria, a prominent state Republican who until recently was the party chair in Valencia County, near Albuquerque, said the Peña case laid bare a dilemma in a state where Democrats have steadily expanded their sway in recent years: how to appeal to some of Trump’s most ardent supporters, who refused to accept his 2020 reelection defeat, without alienating other voters who reject the lies and conspiracy theories.

“You don’t take a group of people whose support you want and tell them, ‘You’re a bunch of crazies,’” Candelaria said. “You’re going to have some extremists that you have to figure out how to keep their support.”

But Candelaria, who has pushed for leadership changes in the state party, said that Peña’s arrest showed the risks of promoting such figures. “Had we done some good vetting, we could have picked apart this guy, but no, we don’t do a good job of picking candidates,” he said.

It was unclear how much Republican leaders had examined Peña’s background. Steve Pearce, a former member of Congress who is now chair of the New Mexico Republican Party, did not respond to requests for comment.

Some Republicans are bracing for more revelations about Peña, who was arrested Monday and charged with criminal solicitation, attempted aggravated battery, shooting at an occupied dwelling, shooting from a moving vehicle and conspiracy.

Police called him the “mastermind” behind a conspiracy in which four other men were paid to shoot at the homes of two county commissioners and two state legislators, and said that he personally participated in at least one of the shootings.

As part of their investigation, Albuquerque police detectives said they were also examining whether Peña used proceeds from narcotics trafficking to finance his campaign and whether campaign laws were violated. The New Mexico attorney general’s office will lead the investigation into Peña’s campaign finances, a spokesperson for the office said Friday.

The turn in the investigation came after detectives learned through witness interviews that Peña had identified individuals to funnel contributions from an unknown source into his campaign, according to Gilbert Gallegos, a spokesperson for the department. Investigators said they are focusing on José Trujillo, who is also accused in the shootings, and Trujillo’s mother, Melanie Griego, who are listed as donating a total of $9,150 to Peña’s campaign.

Police arrested Trujillo on Jan. 3, shortly after the shooting targeting the Albuquerque home of Linda Lopez, a state senator. In the car that Trujillo was driving, which police say is owned by Peña, investigators say they found 893 fentanyl pills and $3,036 in cash, as well as a firearm matching shell casings found at Lopez’s home.

Peña made his first court appearance Wednesday and did not enter a plea. Roberta Yurcic, a lawyer representing him, said she couldn’t comment on specific aspects of her client’s background, including his military demotions and work history. “The investigation into the charges against my client is ongoing,” she added. “Mr. Peña has a right to a fair trial.”

Javier Martinez, a Democrat whose home was targeted in the attacks after the November election, said he had “never experienced anything like this before.” Martinez, who took over this month as New Mexico’s speaker of the House, tied Peña’s extremism to the election lies voiced by Trump.

“The previous president, I think, really exploited some of those feelings,” Martinez said. “And we’ve seen it play out in different ways, including the insurrection in Washington, D.C., including this set of events here in our own backyard.”

Peña presented himself as someone on the mend, leading groups in prayer at political meetings and telling neighbors that he did not drink or take drugs. But he made little effort to hide his extreme views. His campaign website denounced “the demonic theories of the Globalist Elites and their foreign counterparts,” called feminism “demonicism,” and said the 2020 election had been rigged against Trump by “enemy combatants” who “must be placed in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, for the remainder of their natural lives.”

During his campaign, Peña highlighted his time as a Navy hospital corpsman assigned to a Marine division in Okinawa, Japan. But promotion data provided by the U.S. Navy’s public affairs office shows that Peña hardly served with distinction. He was demoted twice during his four years in the service and left the military in 2004 at the lowest possible rank. The Navy was unable to provide the reasons for Peña’s demotions.

Peña ran on a platform of cracking down on crime, despite his own criminal history. He served nearly seven years in prison in New Mexico on charges including burglary and larceny after being part of a “smash-and-grab” crew that slammed vehicles into retail stores, including a Kmart in Albuquerque, then stole items, according to court records.

After being released from prison in 2016, Peña tried selling cars at a dealership in Albuquerque but lasted less than a month before he was fired for showing up late, court records from a lawsuit filed by Peña in 2017 show. (The case was dismissed.) Peña also enrolled at the University of New Mexico, obtaining a political science degree in 2021, the same year that his voting rights were restored after his prison term.

Peña appears to have run for the Republican nomination for the state legislative seat unopposed. In October, he received an endorsement from the Republican National Hispanic Assembly’s New Mexico chapter. Ronnie Lucero, chair of both the group’s national organization and the state chapter, said that he had spoken with Peña at events during the campaign and that the candidate had filled out a questionnaire asking about his professional, financial and criminal history before the group endorsed him.

The group did not see Peña’s criminal record as disqualifying, Lucero said, adding: “At the time that we made the endorsement, there was the impression that he’d got his life together and he’s one of those second-chance stories that would turn out to be something good and positive for the community.

“It was a bad decision that we made and regretfully,” he said. “But we can’t read the future.”

When asked about some of the extremist rhetoric on Peña’s campaign website, Lucero said that he had not seen the statements — although they were published before the endorsement, according to the Internet Archive — and that they would have given him pause if he had.

Some Republican officials defended the apparent lack of vetting before the party establishment put its support behind Peña, which included defending him when his opponent sought to have him disqualified from the race because of his criminal record, which could potentially have prohibited him from taking office.

“The Republican Party did not recruit him,” said Rep. Bill Rehm, a Republican state legislator from Albuquerque, adding that he did not think the party establishment should vet candidates. “He, like anyone else, can sign up to run for whatever office.”


Discover more from NJTODAY.NET

Subscribe to get the latest posts to your email.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from NJTODAY.NET

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

Discover more from NJTODAY.NET

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading