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Torrance County DWI Drug Court, New Mexico

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The Torrance County DWI Drug Court resides in New Mexico. Click on the links below to learn more about the court's...

Jurisdiction

This court holds the following jurisdiction:[1][2]

New Mexico Treatment Courts, also traditionally known as Problem Solving Courts or Drug Courts, are collaborative justice programs operating under the district, magistrate and municipal courts.[3]
As of March 30, 2021, 28 counties and 12 of the state's 13 judicial districts have at least one drug court program. Five counties and the 10th judicial district do not have one yet. ...

New Mexico Treatment Courts use the collaborative treatment-based Drug Court model to work with repeat offenders whose criminal activity is driven by underlying substance abuse or mental illness. As alternatives to incarceration, these programs focus on the successful rehabilitation of participants through early, continuous, and intense judicial oversight, treatment, mandatory periodic drug testing, and use of appropriate sanctions, incentives, and other community-based rehabilitation services. In New Mexico, we include the four types of drug courts (Adult, Juvenile, Family Dependency, and DWI) along with Mental Health courts under the term Treatment Courts.[3]

Selection method

See also: Judicial selection in the states
See also: Partisan election of judges

Judges of the New Mexico Problem-Solving Courts are selected in partisan elections to six-year terms. They must compete in yes-no retention elections if they wish to serve subsequent terms.[4]

Judicial elections in New Mexico

See also: New Mexico judicial elections

New Mexico is one of eight states that use partisan elections to initially select judges and then use retention elections to determine whether judges should remain on the bench. To read more about how states use judicial elections to select judges across the country, click here.

Retention election

In these elections, judges do not compete against another candidate, but voters are given a "yes" or "no" choice whether to keep the judge in office for another term. The retention elections are held on general election day. In a retention election, a candidate must receive 57% of the vote to be retained.[5]

See also



External links

Footnotes