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Photos: Navajo Trail OpenFriday was the first day of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club20101583Wil Collins reaches for his ball on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 15001859Devin Schreiner hits down the fairway on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/ Durango Herald) 20101580Jay Osmon tees off on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 32274958Griffin Barela putts on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 20101341Joe Baldeck III tees off on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 15002268Wil Collins chips onto the green on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/ Durango Herald) 15001896Micah Rudosky putts on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 15001710Ryan Hodge tees off on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 15001824Tony Mike Jr. tees off on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 20101533Steve Manning reads the green on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 20101287Pat Beyhan chips onto the green on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 15001588Michael Biondo hits onto the green on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 15001775Joe Baldeck III reacts to a missed putt on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 15002053Micah Rudosky hits an approach shot on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 15002031Wil Collins hits a putt on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald[email protected]21182873Lamar Carlile tees off on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 15001789Brandon Lee hits out of the bunker on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald) 15002064Devin Schreiner hits an approach shot on Friday during the first round of the Navajo Open at Hillcrest Golf Club. (Jerry McBride/ Durango Herald)
Friday was the first day of the Navajo Trail Open at Hillcrest Golf Club
36002401Bloomfield Police Department Chief Phillip Francisco presents the folded U.S. flag to Pamela Sanchez, mother of the fallen officer Timothy Ontiveros, during the funeral service on Monday. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)Photos: Hundreds gather to honor fallen Bloomfield Police officer Timothy OntiverosA solemn procession stretched for blocks Monday morning along West Apache Street in Farmington – a display of unity, grief and honor for Bloomfield Police Officer Timothy Ontiveros, 32.About 7 a.m., a large contingent of law enforcement, motorcyclists, friends and grieving family prepared to embark on the motorcade to the 9 a.m. service at the Bloomfield High School football stadium to celebrate the life of the officer. 27001972Bloomfield Police officer Timothy Ontiveros36002401Law enforcement officers from state-wide take the U.S. flag off of the casket for folding during the funeral services for Bloomfield Police Department officer Timothy Ontiveros on Monday. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401Bloomfield Police Department police officers bring the casket and body of officer Timothy Ontiveros onto the field at the beginning of the funeral service on Monday at Bobcat Stadium. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401Law enforcement officers from statewide take part in the folding of the U.S. flag during the funeral services for Bloomfield Police Department Officer Timothy Ontiveros on Monday. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401Santa Fe Fire Department personnel ring the bell during the funeral service for the fallen Bloomfield Police Department Officer Timothy Ontiveros on Monday. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401Law enforcement officers from state-wide participate in the twenty-one gun salute for Bloomfield Police Department Officer Timothy Ontiveros during the funeral service on Monday, June 9, 2025 at Bobcat Stadium. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401The U.S. flag draped casket of Bloomfield Police Department officer Timothy Ontiveros rests on the football field on Monday. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham presents the flag flown at the state Capitol to Bloomfield Police Department Officer Timothy Ontiveros' mother, Pamela Sanchez, at the beginning of the funeral service on Monday. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002400San Juan County Sheriff's Office deputies salute as the funeral motorcade for Officer Timothy Ontiveros goes by at the intersection of West Blanco Boulevard and First Street in Bloomfield on Monday. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002400Bloomfield Fire and Rescue Department fire fighters salute as the hearse transporting the body of Officer Timothy Ontiveros rolls by on Monday, June 9, 2025. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)24013600Bloomfield Police Department Officer Timothy Ontiveros' funeral motorcade traverses off the hill southbound on U.S. Highway 550 on Monday. Officer Ontiveros died of injuries sustained from a gunshot on May 26 during a routine traffic stop. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)
A solemn procession stretched for blocks Monday morning along West Apache Street in Farmington – a d...
Images from the 2025 Shiprock MarathonSome of the top images from the Shiprock MarathonAnelli Baron of Newark, CA, is the overall female marathon finisher with the chip time of 3:29:36 at the Shiprock Marathon on Saturday, May 3, 2025. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401[email protected]Kashon Harrison, Kirtland Central High School and University of Colorado alumni, is the overall male marathon finisher with the chip time of 2:31:40 at the Shiprock Marathon on Saturday, May 3, 2025. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401[email protected]Navajo Nation Police officer Brandon Jim (left) assists fellow officer Derek Drake (right) in the final ten meters of the half-marathon on Saturday, May 3, 2025 at Shiprock Marathon. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)24013600[email protected]Lydia Kim and Neil Gholkar of Los Angeles, CA, finish the half marathon race together at the Shiprock Marathon on Saturday, May 3, 2025. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401[email protected]Half-marathoner Marty Benally of Kirtland, NM, comes down the final stretch to the finish line at the Shiprock Marathon on Saturday, May 3, 2025. Benally finished with the chip time of 2:03:41. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401[email protected]Mother and daughter Joan Arviso (right) and Kaibah Gorman (left) finish up the half-marathon race on Saturday, May 3, 2025 at Shiprock Marathon. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)24013600[email protected]U.S. Army veteran Benjamin Bowman of Ganado, AZ, competes in the half-marathon race on Saturday, May 3, 2025 at Shiprock Marathon. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401[email protected]Miss Navajo Nation 2024-25 Rashinda Begay comes down the final stretch to the finish line and completes the half-marathon race on Saturday, May 3, 2025 at Shiprock Marathon. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401[email protected]Half-marathoner Sandy Willie, 71 years old, Shiprock, NM, comes to the finish line with the chip time of 3:29:10 on Saturday, May 3, 2025 at Shiprock Marathon. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401[email protected]Rosa Amaya of Denver, CO, finishes the marathon race with the chip time of 4:33:30 on Saturday, May 3, 2025 at Shiprock Marathon. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401[email protected]Benjamin Mann, Sr., of Lukachukai, AZ, finishes up the half-marathon race on Saturday, May 3, 2025 at Shiprock Marathon. (Curtis Ray Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record)36002401[email protected]
Some of the top images from the Shiprock Marathon
Photos/video: Galloping alongThe Rio Grande Southern Galloping Goose No.530002061The Rio Grande Southern Galloping Goose No. 5 makes its way up the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad tracks on Saturday heading to Cascade Canyon. Goose No. 5 was originally built in 1933 and then the Galloping Goose Historical Society of Dolores completely restored it in 1997. The Goose will be in Durango until May 18. Check the D&SNGR website for scheduled times. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)30002052The Rio Grande Southern Galloping Goose No. 5 makes its way up the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad tracks on Saturday heading to Cascade Canyon. Goose No. 5 was originally built in 1933 and then the Galloping Goose Historical Society of Dolores completely restored it in 1997. The Goose will be in Durango until May 18. Check the D&SNGR website for scheduled times. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)0VideoYouTube48036015002002The Rio Grande Southern Galloping Goose No. 5 makes its way up the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad tracks on Saturday heading to Cascade Canyon. Goose No. 5 was originally built in 1933 and then the Galloping Goose Historical Society of Dolores completely restored it in 1997. The Goose will be in Durango until May 18. Check the D&SNGR website for scheduled times. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)30001970The Rio Grande Southern Galloping Goose No. 5 makes its way up the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad tracks on Saturday heading to Cascade Canyon. Goose No. 5 was originally built in 1933 and then the Galloping Goose Historical Society of Dolores completely restored it in 1997. The Goose will be in Durango until May 18. Check the D&SNGR website for scheduled times. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)15001947The Rio Grande Southern Galloping Goose No. 5 makes its way up the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad tracks on Saturday heading to Cascade Canyon. Goose No. 5 was originally built in 1933 and then the Galloping Goose Historical Society of Dolores completely restored it in 1997. The Goose will be in Durango until May 18. Check the D&SNGR website for scheduled times. (Jerry McBride/Durango Herald)
The Rio Grande Southern Galloping Goose No.5
36002043Christian Hatfield is interviewed at the scene of his crash, near the intersection of U.S. Highway 64 and San Juan County Road 5099, about 1:15 a.m. Aug. 30. (Screenshot from body camera)Montezuma County DA Christian Hatfield charged with DWICharges come 16 weeks after crash near Farmington, New MexicoMontezuma County District Attorney Christian Hatfield was charged Friday with driving while under the influence of alcohol or drugs 16 weeks after he crashed his SUV on U.S. Highway 64 outside Bloomfield.The San Juan County Sheriff’s Office charged Hatfield, 59, with petty misdemeanor charge of DWI and an open container in connection to the Aug. 30 single-car crash.The charges come after results from a blood test by the New Mexico Department of Health Scientific Laboratory showed alcohol and a drug in Hatfield’s body after the crash.8671528Christian Hatfield“The results show that at the time of the blood draw, which was approximately eleven hours after the time of the crash due to medical issues, were 0.05 g/100 ml of Ethanol and 0.04 mg/L of Zolpidem (Ambien). Both Ethanol and Ambien are Central Nervous System Depressants,” the law enforcement report states.Two vials of blood were taken from Hatfield at 1:33 p.m. Aug. 30, which was more than 12 hours after the crash occurred about 1 a.m. Those vials were received by the New Mexico Department of Health Scientific Laboratory at 10:26 a.m. Oct. 11, which was six weeks after the crash, according to records from the lab.An investigation into the blood warrant by The Journal newspaper in Cortez, Colorado, showed that the blood sample sat in a refrigerator at the San Juan County Sheriff’s Office until Oct. 3, because paperwork to send it to the state laboratory was not processed.“I think it’s a non-prosecutable case because of all the errors made by law enforcement,” said Arlon Stoker, a high-profile defense attorney secured by Hatfield to fight the charges.26461890A screenshot from a law enforcement body camera shows Christian Hatfield, 59, after an alleged DWI crash on Aug. 30 on U.S. Highway 64 outside Bloomfield. (Screenshot from video)The charges made by the San Juan County Sheriff’s Office are “based on the observations made by law enforcement officers on scene and the presence of intoxicating drugs and liquors in Christian's blood,” according to the report that was given to The Journal by the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government.Amanda Lavin, legal director for NMFOG, assisted The Journal in accessing public records from the San Juan County Sheriff’s Office in Aztec. The records had been redacted, leaving out Hatfield’s name and information about the blood warrant filed in San Juan County Magistrate Court.Public records requests by The Journal and the Tri-City Record went unresolved for 14 weeks.The Journal requested body camera footage and lapel camera video on Sept. 3.The Tri-City Record requested any and all warrants, investigative reports and laboratory reports as well as photos, lapel cam videos and dash cam videos on Oct. 23.On Dec. 9, Lavin made the same requests.0VideoYouTube480360The Journal received access to photos and videos in an email on Dec. 19, and Lavin, after making a legal argument for unredacted information, received the full report Dec. 19 and was advised that charges would be forthcoming.The report detailing the crash states that Hatfield was found “unresponsive and barely able to stand” about 1 a.m. Aug. 30 near the intersection of U.S. Highway 64 and County Road 5099.Investigators and medics noted a “pungent” odor of alcohol coming from Hatfield, and investigators found “an open 12-ounce can of Mexican Lager with residual liquid inside,” an “empty wine glass,” and a “bottle of Ambien prescribed to Christian,” according to the report.The affidavit for search warrant for blood submitted by sheriff’s deputy Avery Killifer states he had an “opinion that the defendant was driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor or a controlled substance.” The deputy “placed the defendant under arrest” at the time, but Hatfield was taken to San Juan Regional Medical Center, because of “extensive injuries.”A summons was issued for Hatfield, and an arraignment is set for 8:30 a.m. Jan. 8 in Aztec Magistrate Court.33661884The intersection of U.S. Highway 64 and San Juan County Road 5099, where a Toyota 4Runner reportedly driven by Montezuma County DA Christian Hatfield struck the guardrail around 1 a.m. Aug. 30.
Charges come 16 weeks after crash near Farmington, New Mexico
Christmas in New MexicoTri-City Record photographers share images of the season45513211A couple check out the Christmas tree at the Farmington Civic Center downtown. (Brad Ryan/Special to the Tri-City Record)50353357Angel Peak during "the golden hour."Debi Tracy Olsen/Special to the Tri-City Record.36002401Comet C/2023 A3 (Tsuchinshan-ATLAS), seen from the east face of Tsébitaí (rock with wings) pinnacle. on Oct. 23. Curtis Benally/Special to the Tri-City Record
Tri-City Record photographers share images of the season
Video: Bloomfield boys basketball coach Dominique Richardson talks win over TohatchiBobcats outlast Cougars 59-48 on Wednesday0VideoYouTube48036021001195(Screenshot)
Bobcats outlast Cougars 59-48 on Wednesday
Video: Kirtland girls basketball coach Devon Manning talks win over St. PiusDefending Class 4A state champions cruise to 63-35 victory on Saturday in state finals rematch0VideoYouTube48036034202214(Screenshot)
Defending Class 4A state champions cruise to 63-35 victory on Saturday in state finals rematch
Video: Navajo Prep boys basketball coach Mark Teel talks winning Chieftain Invitational titleEagles cruise to 65-24 win over host team Shiprock in Saturday’s tournament finals0VideoYouTube48036034202214(Screenshot)
Eagles cruise to 65-24 win over host team Shiprock in Saturday’s tournament finals
Video: Navajo Prep girls basketball coach Rainy Crisp talks winning 2024 Chieftain InvitationalLady Eagles top host Shiprock 41-31 in tournament finals on Saturday0VideoYouTube48036034202214(Screenshot)
Lady Eagles top host Shiprock 41-31 in tournament finals on Saturday




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