He attributes the decrease in crime to targeting “the drug culture. If you attack that and shut down the drug dealers, it will impact the crime rate in all other areas.”
There were 536 calls related to crimes last year, about 134 generated from Elephant Butte, Hamilton said.
Crimes against persons went from 145 to 68 incidents, a 51-percent decrease.
Drug incidents went from 140 down to 128, the lowest decrease, Hamilton said, but its reduction is having a big impact on crime reduction in general.
This is the fifth year the Sheriff’s Office has been targeting drug crime, Hamilton said, with crime in general going down 3 percent after the program was in effect the first year and then 8 percent, 10 percent and 51.5 percent in 2018.
Hamilton has also been careful to coordinate with other law-enforcement agencies to ensure they don’t scare away tourists with “overkill” during fun holidays such as Fourth of July and Memorial Day. The State Police, Border Patrol and Sheriff’s Office split up duties and locations so there is no “overlap.”
“Accidents are way down,” he said, because law enforcement has been positioned at key locations, not spread out in larger numbers.
Last year was the first year he didn’t get dozens of calls from Elephant Butte businesses complaining visitors, campers and tourists stayed away or in their RVs and hotel rooms to avoid law enforcement.