“Why am I running? I believe, with my 20-years’ experience in criminal justice in the military and law enforcement and my education will benefit the community. And I want to give the court hours back to the citizens.”
Baca moved back to the area after a four-year absence in 2018. Since then he has been teaching Reserved Officers’ Training Corps classes at the local high school.
He was a police officer with the City of Truth or Consequences and then was elected Sierra County Sheriff in 2011, serving until 2014.
He has been a member of the military since 1991, serving seven years active service and the rest in the National Guard Reserves.
Baca retired as a military police captain in 2016.
His position as military police captain required him to rule on misconduct charges, giving him some judicial experience, he said.
He has a bachelor’s of science in criminal justice from American Intercontinental University. “I got it online when I was a police officer,” Baca said.
His master’s is from Webster University in St. Louis, Missouri, attending classes there while a Captain in the Army. The degree title is “Business and Organizational Security Management,” Baca said, “which is similar to criminal justice.”
The City of Truth or Consequences sets its own salary for its municipal judge, Baca said, the City Code stating $20,000 will be paid for the first five years of judicial experience. “After that it’s $30,000 with a maximum salary of $42,000.”
“The judge sets his own schedule, as long as he is not behind on the docket,” Baca said. “I will hold court in the evening, from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m., or 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.”
“Working people won’t have to miss work. Right now people not only have to pay a fine, but lose a day of work in the process,” Baca said.
“I’ll also hold traffic court one day a week, so people won’t have to wait until they get a summons before responding to a ticket. It will be a trailing docket,” Baca said. “Before the case is set for trial, a person can come in and plead not guilty and get a court date.”
Asked if this schedule will increase the overtime pay for police officers, Baca said, “I think they are on 12-hour shifts, so a 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. schedule would catch part of both shifts. Police officers work around the clock, not just 9 to 5, so there is always going to be overtime.”
Baca is also sensitive to the City’s limited budget when it comes to sentencing costs.
“You have to come up with alternative sentencing,” he said. Although the code allows up to 6 months in jail, it would cost the City a lot of money to house them.
“And if they have medical issues the City would have to pay for that too,” he said. An alternative and less-costly sentence would be “six-month’s probation and community service.”