1967 Courthouse Shoot-out – New Mexico Land Grant Activists Juan Valdez dead
Juan Valdez, a land grant activist who fired the first shot during a 1967 New Mexico courthouse raid that grabbed international attention and helped spark the Chicano Movement, has died. He was 74.
Shooter in 1967 New Mexico courthouse raid dies
By RUSSELL CONTRERAS – The Seattle Times
Tierra Amarilla, N.M. — Juan Valdez, a land grant activist who fired the first shot during a 1967 New Mexico courthouse raid that grabbed international attention and helped spark the Chicano Movement, has died. He was 74.
Valdez died peacefully Saturday at his Canjilon ranch after recently suffering two heart attacks, his daughter Juanita Montoya said.
Heir to a northern New Mexico land grant, Valdez was 29 years old when he and a group of land grant advocates, led by Reies Lopez Tijerina, raided a Rio Arriba County courthouse in Tierra Amarilla. Their goal was to attempt a citizens’ arrest of then-District Attorney Alfonso Sanchez over Hispanic land rights issues.
Valdez had gotten involved with Tijerina’s group, known as Alianza Federal de Mercedes – an organization founded to help Mexican-American heirs to old Spanish land grants reclaim land that was illegally taken by white settlers and the U.S. government.
“Tijerina impressed me when he and most of the people who had walked from Albuquerque set up a camp and refused to leave,” Valdez told retired lawyer Mike Scarborough in the book “Trespassers On Our Own Land,” an oral history of the Valdez family.
During the raid, it was Valdez who shot and wounded state police officer Nick Saiz after the officer went for his pistol and refused commands by Valdez to put his hands up.
“It came down to, I shoot him or he was going to shoot me – so I pulled the trigger,” Valdez said in the book. “Lucky for both of us, he didn’t die.”
The raiders also beat a deputy and took a sheriff and reporter hostage.
After holding the courthouse for a couple of hours, the armed group fled to the mountains as the National Guard and armored tanks chased them.
Valdez was convicted of assault but was later pardoned by Gov. Bruce King.
The episode cemented Valdez and Tijerina’s legacy among activists from the Chicano Movement of the 1970s who favored more radical methods of fighting discrimination over those of the moderate Mexican American civil rights leaders a generation before.
“He loved the attention,” said Montoya, 48. “He wanted people to know our history and what happened to our land.”
Valdez is survived by his wife, Rose Valdez, and seven of his eight children. …source
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