When Aragon was placed on administrative leave Sept. 9, about 20 members of the public showed up to the city commission meeting to try to save Aragon’s job, mostly citing his help with the animal shelter and his good relations with the community.
The reason for Aragon first being placed on administrative leave and then being fired Sept. 17 is unknown. It is also unknown if Madrid conducted an investigation.
An anonymous tipster sent the Sierra County Sun an article that describes why Aragon was placed on leave and eventually resigned from his job as Fairbanks chief of police on October 28, 2017—nine months before becoming Truth or Consequences’ chief of police.
The City of Fairbanks, however, made the reason for Aragon’s placement on leave and the results of an investigation into Aragon’s wrongdoing public.
The Jan. 20, 2017, Anchorage Daily News article, “Investigation finds former moonlighting Fairbanks chief had conflict of interest,” by Laurel Andrews, cites the investigation document. Aragon was “profiting from information gained through his position as a law enforcement officer to advance financial or other private interests.”
Aragon was running his own security business on the side. He had conducted four on-duty security checks for businesses for free and five off-duty security checks for $600 each, the investigation uncovered.
“He made comments that his (security) surveys were better than those of the police officers, more thorough,” investigator Teal Soden said. “Aragon’s boasts were attempts to convince people to pay for his services.”
Bad-mouthing the department and profiting from insider information were deemed conflicts of interest.
Aragon would not comment last week on his firing and the week before he would not comment on the reason for being placed on administrative leave. He did not return a call for comment on his conflict of interest while chief at Fairbanks by press time.
Aragon became Truth or Consequences Chief of Police July 2018. This most recent placement on leave was his second while chief. He was placed on administrative leave in October 2018 and returned to work about a month later. Aragon would not comment on that administrative leave either. The city would not fulfill document requests for the investigation, claiming exemptions from the Inspection of Public Records Act.
Aragon may face questions from the public while on the campaign trail He is running for position three on the Sierra County school board, which is on the Nov. 5 election ballot.
Lt. Erica Baker is interim-chief of police, with Michael Apodaca–coming out of retirement–to become chief on Oct. 1.