Saturday, November 4th, 2006
The deadline set by the Las Cruces Blackmailer passed yesterday (Friday) at 7 pm with no consequences.
This was the second deadline set by the extortionist.
Here’s the 24-hour tip line for any information about the case:
(505) 635-9934
Tags: Blackmail Deadline Passes
Wednesday, November 1st, 2006
According to the local paper, the deadline given by the Las Cruces Blackmailer is 7 pm, Friday, November 3. If the blackmailer isn’t paid an undisclosed amount by that time, he (or she) threatens to start shooting school children.
“More bodies will fall. Now they will fall in school yards. Don’t believe us? Try us again.”
Police are taking this threat extremely seriously. Schools are being kept locked, outside activities are banned, and extra police are patrolling schools.
A letter released to parents by the Las Cruces Public Schools requested that parents cooperate with the following new security measures:
* Please sign in when visiting our building.
* Doors will be locked, please enter through the front door only.
* Help us look for suspicious cars, people or anything out of the ordinary around our campus.
Here’s the 24-hour tip line for any information about the case:
(505) 635-9934
Tags: Extortionist Deadline Released, Las Cruces Blackmailer
Wednesday, November 1st, 2006
The threats to local school children by an unknown extortionist are being taken very seriously by the police and local authorities.
School doors will be locked, and outside activities cancelled or curtailed. Additional police will be present at schools.
If you have any information about this crime, call the 24-hour tip line:
(505) 635-9934
Tags: Las Cruces Extortionist
Tuesday, October 31st, 2006
The Las Cruces Blackmailer has sent the local paper a new letter threatening to shoot Crucens unless paid a large sum of money.
Here are the details of his previous extortion attempt:
City threatened by shooter
Shooting rumors engulf city
Your city is in danger
Blackmail letter released
$26000 offered
Deadline friday
Full police alert
$51000 reward
LCPD issues video
Las Cruces Police Statement
Deadline passes
The Blackmailer had previously set a deadline of September 22. That day passed with no consequences. The local paper states that the Blackmailer has set a new deadline in early November.
It quotes the new letter as saying:
“More bodies will fall. Now they will fall in school yards. Don’t believe us? Try us again.”
This could be a reference to the tragic shooting of a child several days ago. No one has been identified and arrested in that crime, but authorities are saying they don’t think it’s related to the threats.
A reward of $51,000 is offered for information leading to the capture and prosecution of the person or persons responsible.
Here’s the 24-hour line for reporting tips:
(505) 635-9934
Any kind of information could be valuable.
Tags: Las Cruces Blackmailer, Deadline, Reward, Tip Line
Tuesday, October 31st, 2006
According to the Irish myth, the Jack O’ Lantern is designed to ward off wandering spirits.

Tags: Jack O’ Lantern, Halloween
Friday, October 27th, 2006
Las Cruces has one of Peter Wolf Toth’s Whispering Giants, as noted here.
Since yesterday was the 50th anniversary of the Hungarian Revolution, this is a good time to review his book on his sculptures and life, Indian Giver.

Indian Giver was published in 1980. It begins with his childhood in Hungary. He was born in 1947, the seventh child in a family that eventually numbered 11 kids.
Conditions under the communists were brutally harsh, and got even worse when what little property his father had was taken and given to a party member. They were left with a dirt-floored house in which the only furniture was a table and 13 chairs.
When the people of Hungary revolted against the Russians, it appeared at first they had succeeded. The Russians even agreed to negotiate — but it was a ruse. They returned with a huge force, mercilessly crushing all opposition. Mass arrests and executions followed.
Two of Toth’s brothers escaped to the West, and Toth’s parents decided they would follow. For a short period of time the Yugoslavian border was open because the United States was paying Yugoslavia a bounty for every Hungarian that was permitted to leave Hungary.
After a dangerous escape and two years in refugee camps in Europe, Toth and his family came to the United States as sponsored immigrants.
Following his account of his life, Toth describes how he carved his first sculpture in a rock cliff, motivated by a compelling image he saw in the stone. That was 1972.
After carving a second sculpture in wood, he decided he would carve one for each state in the country, taking nothing for his work.
The difficulties and rewards of the first 27 “Whispering Giants” are described, and pictured. These sculptures are not “works” created in a studio — they are his life, requiring months of travel searching for the appropriate tree and location, and months of carving.
In releasing the image he sees in each unique piece of wood, he satisfies something deep in himself. But he also makes it clear the work itself is a physical pleasure — the outdoors, the textures, the fragrances — even scrubbing pitch out of his hair.

This is a wonderful, exuberant book. It is no longer in print, so see if you can find a used copy.
Tags: Indian Giver, Peter Wolf Toth, Trail of the Whispering Giants
Tuesday, October 24th, 2006
Slow rain most of the night and all morning. Here’s what the Organs look like.

Tags: Organ Mountains
Monday, October 23rd, 2006
Las Cruces has seen huge growth in the last few years. The population of the city has increased 8.5% since 2000, to an estimated 83,000. There are an additional 40,000 to 50,000 people living in the surrounding valley, and a total of about 190,000 in the county (Doña Ana).
Real Estate and housing prices have doubled during that period. The local paper reports that the average closing price of a house in Las Cruces last month was $221,000. A year ago it was $176,000.
I think the growth of Las Cruces is just beginning. Las Cruces offers attractions and advantages that are no longer available in states such as Colorado, Arizona, and Nevada. I predict a huge influx of relatively wealthy people, most from the West Coast.
This is going to continue to change Las Cruces in unfortunate ways.
Tags: Real Estate, House Prices, Population, Las Cruces