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Fraudulent prescriptions, a sex crime and even a few solid waste capers have kept the Edgewood Police Department busy this month.
That's according to Chief James Daniels, who gave a short rundown of the cases to the Edgewood Town Council on April 21. One of the most egregious, he said, was an alleged sexual crime in Edgewood.
Rodney Wayne Carwile, 38, is accused of criminal sexual penetration, criminal sexual contact of a minor, and abandonment or child abuse of a child.
Carwile allegedly raped and molested a male relative from 2002 to 2004. When the Edgewood Police Department got word of the allegations against Carwile on March 29, all the officers in Edgewood put their other cases on hold, Daniels said.
"This one was priority," he said. "In a matter of days we were putting everything together."
An arrest warrant was filed by Edgewood Police officer David Brown on April 8. Carwile was picked up by police at his workplace in Albuquerque, Daniels said, and Carwile's bond was set at $500,000 cash, according to court records.
The department also served warrants on April 3 in a case involving a prescription drug ring. Four people were arrested for using fake prescriptions to buy oxycodone from Edgewood pharmacies.
Jason Akridge, 31, Echo Glover, 31, Veronica Anaya, 19, and Martin Aragon, 33, were all arrested and now face charges of fraudulently obtaining a controlled substance in Santa Fe Magistrate Court.
All four were picked up in February and faced similar charges in state District Court in Santa Fe, but those charges were dismissed on March 10.
Edgewood police were told about some odd prescriptions by Robert Andrews, a pharmacist at the Smiths in Edgewood. Andrews called Edgewood police after he was handed a strange-looking prescription, he said.
"They were just odd-looking," Andrews said. "We report every (suspicious prescription) we find."
A resident of the Edgewood area, Andrews said he doesn't want that kind of activity going on in his town.
Edgewood Police were also alerted about a man who was dumping grease from an American Waste Disposal truck into the town's sewer, according to Town Administrator Karen Mahalick. The man was caught just minutes after the incident, Daniels said.
Mahalick said there have been other incidents of illegal dumping. There was evidence that someone had dumped sewage into the storm drains — which lead to drain fields and possibly the groundwater, not any kind of treatment plant — near Walmart, at N.M. 344 and Church Street. The sewage left blue-green remnants, she said.
There have also been instances of sewage from septic tanks being illegally pumped into the town's sewage collection lines, Mahalick said. That could create a very expensive problem for the town because the microscopic organisms that break down waste in septic tanks are anaerobic, meaning they need little air, while the town's sewage treatment plant has aerobic organisms, according to town staff.
[...]
http://www.mvtelegraph.com/index.php/news/2931-Police--Arresting-Alleged-Molester-Was-No.-1-Job.html

Well for being number one job I would hope they would have a picture but I couldnt find one anyplace
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