While Thomas Hawkins was municipal judge, Sanders applied for a job to computerize the municipal court records and forms. “I need to automate your court,” Sanders told Hawkins. “He had been writing in ledgers. Nobody wanted computers back then. He hired me and bought the computer, but he didn’t want any part of it.”
“I had it automated within a year,” Sanders said. “I went through every ledger he had. I had good foresight where we were headed. I could see DWIs would become critical in our state. I transferred the DWI cases into the databases I thought should not go away.”
Soon after Sanders convinced Hawkins the court should assess Driving-While-Intoxicated offenders using a software tool that could predict if they needed treatment.
“Later it became mandatory,” Sanders said. “But we had it years before it was required.”
Sanders also instituted a program for teens, under District Judge Leslie Smith, “who later became a federal judge,” Sanders said, and Teen Court was born, an alternative-sentencing court for youth.
“I only had one argument with Judge Smith,” Sanders said. “I didn’t think it was right that only the well-recognized kids be on the jury and chair the panel. I said we needed diversity.” She won that argument with Smith.
“Our teen court was the second one in the state. Now there are 28,” Sanders said. “I am president of the association I helped create.”
“I keep coming up with more ideas of what a municipal court should look like,” Sanders said.
Currently Sanders serves on two statewide judicial committees tasked with coming up with alternative sentencing and treatment for drug cases. One is for municipal judges called “the Z Team,” Sanders said. The other is a district court “summit,” she said.
“Once aware of the mental health and drug issues, you need to do something besides putting these people in jail,” Sanders said. “As judge you have discretion. If you put them in jail, when they get out nothing has changed. There are too many people sitting in jail. They need to get treatment.”
Sanders served as Hawkins’s alternative judge for about 15 years. He appointed her to fulfill the remaining years of his term from 2014 to 2016. Then Sanders ran for municipal judge in 2016 and won a four-year term, which expires this year.
Most of her cases involve City Code violations, followed by animal-control cases and then traffic violations.
Observing cases over the last 30 years, Sanders said she has seen a tremendous rise in methamphetamine use in the City.
“It used to be alcohol was our worst problem, but the community has changed considerably. Families are greatly affected by the meth problem. CYFD has to remove children from the home. We have many more homeless kids we didn’t have before.”
Sanders has instituted a municipal-court drug testing and monitoring program, with offenders coming straight to her once a week, she said, “So I know exactly what is going on.”
She has been criticized for not using the DWI program’s monitoring services, but she found she has better control and knowledge if she doesn’t have to go through a third party for testing results.
“I’m bracing myself for the cannabis influx,” Sanders said. “Kids like to argue it’s not addictive and they will be able to get it legally. It will affect their driving.”
Sanders has 28 years of “mandatory education” the courts required during the years she has worked for the municipal court, the courses taken at the University of New Mexico School of Law.
She also has a bachelor’s degree in Criminal Justice, “with a concentration in administration,” Sanders said. The courses were taken through New Mexico State University, with the degree awarded by the online Phoenix University.