© 2024 NEW MEXICO NEWS SERVICES 8/18/25
Democrats are on the wrong side of medical malpractice reform
By Sherry Robinson
All She Wrote
The State Ethics Commission tore the mask off New Mexico Safety Over Profit and revealed – ta da! – trial lawyers.
After arguing that they didn’t have to register as lobbyists or reveal funding sources, NMSOP had a change of heart after reading the commission’s 73-page lawsuit. They settled by paying a $5,000 fine (the maximum allowed), registering with the state, and releasing their full list of donors, along with expenditures.
We learn that in recent years about 50 trial lawyers and/or their firms dug into deep pockets and found nearly $1.3 million to fight reforms of the state’s medical malpractice law and related measures. Three-quarters of donors are board members or past presidents of the Trial Lawyers Association. Many have waged the big-dollar lawsuits against healthcare providers that appear in the news. Four were outside the state, including showboat Iowa lawyer Nicholas Rowley, who ponied up $425,000. The Trial Lawyers Association was good for $245,000.
So much for the charade that NMSOP was just a group of regular folks. Now they want us to know who they are. In a recent newspaper ad, NMSOP said in red boldface: “We don’t hide our donors. We celebrate them.”
This is the group that crushed reform of the state’s medical malpractice law in the last legislative session. This law, delivered in 2021 by a former Trial Lawyers Association president and a compliant Legislature, has painted a target on the state’s doctors and caused malpractice insurance premiums and litigation to spike. New Mexico is the only state losing doctors.
This year, to fight medical malpractice reforms advanced by the nonprofit Think New Mexico, NMSOP advertised in newspapers and social media and attacked Think New Mexico in op eds. The Trial Lawyers Association in 2024 showered Democrats with $556,354 in campaign contributions.
According to followthemoney.org, the Trial Lawyers Association gave $15,200 to Sen. Peter Wirth, $20,700 to Sen. Linda Lopez, $10,700 to Sen. Joe Cervantes, $10,000 to Sen. Katy Duhigg, and $8,000 to Sen. Cindy Nava.
Here’s what they got.
The two key bills were SB 176, which protected injured patients but capped attorney payouts, and HB 243, which allowed New Mexico to join the Interstate Medical Licensure Compact, an agreement among states to recognize each others’ professional licenses. It’s the easiest way to increase doctors, said sponsors. Companion bills would have done the same for other healthcare professions.
Senate Majority Leader Peter Wirth, a lawyer, assigned SB 176 to three committees to slow it down. He defended the 2021 measure to the Albuquerque Journal and repeated NMSOP talking points about harming patients and holding insurance companies responsible.
Sen. Linda Lopez held SB 176 in her Health and Public Affairs Committee for 40 days of the session’s 60 days. Her biggest campaign donor in 2024 was the Trial Lawyers Association; with contributions from individual lawyers and law firms the amount doubles.
SB 176 died there on a 5-4 vote, with Democrats voting against. Donations to the five cost the trial lawyers less than $300,000.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Joe Cervantes sat on the compact bill, HB 243, more than a week after it passed the House unanimously. In committee he disparaged the medical compacts as a "creative way to make a buck." He and Sen. Katy Duhigg made dozens of amendments until the bill was unacceptable to the interstate compact commission. The other compact bills also died. Trial lawyers don’t like the compacts because they wouldn’t be able to sue the interstate compact commissions that oversee the compacts. Why would they sue the commissions? Who knows?
Cervantes and Duhigg are both lawyers. Their law firms sue doctors. Does anybody think they might have a conflict of interest?
Now look at Rep. Mariana Anaya, who is holding a town hall on medical malpractice reform and doctor shortages. NMSOP’s newly released expenditures show that it paid Anaya’s consulting company $10,000 last October, after she had won her Democratic primary. With no opposition, she was effectively an incoming legislator. This is on top of the trial lawyers’ campaign donation of $6,000.
NMSOP has tossed us enough red herrings to start a seafood café: Greedy corporate-owned hospitals, greedy insurance companies, imagined limits on patients’ right to sue, and hospital horror stories.
Yes, providers make mistakes. Yes, some should find another profession. We feel for the victims and want to assure their care, but who is served by a $40 million verdict that either bankrupts the organization or cripples its ability to serve?
Our healthcare shortage is becoming a major issue. New Mexico Democrats are on the wrong side of this debate.
© 2024 NEW MEXICO NEWS SERVICES 8/11/25
Bullying case puts school’s indifference on display
By Sherry Robinson
All She Wrote
We’ve been hearing about bullying prevention, awareness and laws for so long that we might think it’s not the problem it once was, but some of our kids are still unsafe. Just before school started this year, a jury awarded $1.8 million to a family over an egregious case of bullying.
The Sandoval (County) Signpost reported that, according to the parents’ lawsuit, they repeatedly warned Bernalillo High School Principal Alyssa Sanchez-Padilla about threats of violence from two other students. They even showed her the texts.
State law requires school administrators to investigate bullying, involve parents, and develop safety support plans for targeted students. However, Sanchez-Padilla advised the girl to protect herself by walking with the school’s male athletes. She failed to notify a school resource officer or law enforcement.
A few weeks later, an 18-year-old female student attacked the 15-year-old girl in a first-floor hallway during school hours. According to the lawsuit, the attacker pulled her to the floor by her hair and kicked and punched her head until she lost consciousness. School employees witnessed the assault but didn’t intervene. Another student finally stopped the attack, and even then a second 18-year-old tried to keep him from interfering.
The girl suffered a concussion and head and neck injuries. She was out of school for two months and now suffers from migraines and PTSD.
The Rio Rancho Observer reported that after a school resource officer wrote up the incident, Principal Sanchez-Padilla tried to have information about previous bullying and her own knowledge of the incidents removed, according to the lawsuit.
The girl’s parents sued last year. Bernalillo Public Schools denied most of their claims and tried unsuccessfully to have the case dismissed. Early this month, a jury found the district liable for failing to follow New Mexico’s mandatory bullying prevention laws. Only now does the district express sympathy for the battered girl and claim that the well being and safety of every student is a priority; at the same time they admit to contemplating their legal options. Sanchez-Padilla is still principal of Bernalillo High School.
It’s tempting to say this is an isolated case, but in surveys one in five kids says they’ve been bullied.
In 2019, legislators beefed up the state’s anti-bullying law with the Safe Schools for All Students Act, which passed easily and was enacted in 2020. The law required schools to investigate (the law spells out how they are to investigate) all reports within two school days, notify parents of both victim and offender, develop safety support plans for victims, hand down consequences to offenders, maintain detailed records for at least four years, and provide annual anti-bullying training for all staff. The state Public Education Department was to oversee the effort.
Legislators were clear about what they expected, but this school – and who knows how many others – ignored the law and ignored common sense. Raise your hand if you think it’s reasonable to tell a teenager threatened with violence that she should just find some athletes to walk with? Ladies, step back to your adolescence. Would you have invited yourself to walk with the football players? It’s not something my teenaged self would have done. And how does a school come to display such a culture of indifference to student welfare that the only adult in the room was another kid? Is PED engaged at all?
Along with her physical injuries, our young victim was emotionally manhandled by an authority figure who refused to hear and school employees who refused to see. A jury apparently agreed.
Today, Bernalillo High School’s Parent and Student Handbook has a statement about bullying that covers all the bases about “an environment that is safe, respectful, and free from fear.” Blah, blah, blah.
It’s missing the first step: Listen to the kids.