Tello v. Lea County Board of Commissioners

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedOctober 3, 2025
Docket2:24-cv-00390
StatusUnknown

This text of Tello v. Lea County Board of Commissioners (Tello v. Lea County Board of Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tello v. Lea County Board of Commissioners, (D.N.M. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW MEXICO

KARINA TELLO,

Plaintiff,

v. Civ. No. 2:24-390 KG/GJF

LEA COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS, COREY HELTON, MICHAEL WALKER, FERNANDO JIMENEZ, SEAN ROACH, SONIA ESTRADA, DIANE JURADO-GARCIA, AILEEN VIZCARRA, ALYSSA PORRAS, DOE DEFENDANTS 1-50,

Defendants.

ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR PROTECTIVE ORDER AND REQUEST TO SEAL COURT RECORDS

THIS MATTER is before the Court on Defendants’ Joint Motion for Protective Order and Request to Seal Court Records (Dkt. No. 79) (“Motion”), which is fully briefed. See Dkt. No. 90 (Response); Dkt. No. 98 (Reply). Prior to the completion of briefing, Defendant Porras withdrew as co-movant, indicating that she now “takes no position in the motion.”1 Dkt. No. 83. The Court held a September 8, 2025 evidentiary hearing (“Hr’g”)2 at which it heard testimony from Jim Hardy, Diana Jurado, and Victor Murillo and admitted exhibits, including those attached by the parties to their briefing. Altogether, the Court admitted the following exhibits, which it has considered for purposes of the Motion to the extent it finds them relevant and accessible:3

1 The Court’s use of “Defendants” in this Order refers to all Defendants who are also movants. The Court acknowledges that Defendant Porras’s Notice of Withdrawal (Dkt. No. 83) means that she is no longer among the Defendant-Movants, and it does not consider her as such when it refers to “Defendants” herein.

2 The Hr’g citation refers to an audio recording of the September 8, 2025 evidentiary hearing stored on the Court’s Liberty system. Neither the audio recording nor a transcript is currently available on CM/ECF; however, any party may obtain the recording through the Court’s records department and have it transcribed.

3 To avoid confusion, the Court instructed the parties to mark and in some instances re-mark certain exhibits. Specifically, due to the use of duplicate exhibit numbers, the Court directed Defendants to re-mark the exhibits attached • Defendants’ Exhibit 1, Affidavit of Jim Hardy and attached Motion to Suppress with Exhibits (Dkt. No. 79 at 14–55) • Defendants’ Exhibit 2, 12-Page Excerpt of Online Exchange Ostensibly Between Plaintiff and Amy Jones (Dkt. No. 98-1 at 1–12) • Defendants’ Exhibit 3, Single-Page Excerpt from Eddy and Lea County Exposed Facebook Page (Dkt. No. 98-2) • Defendants’ Exhibit 4, “Snapshot” of the Condition of the Eddy and Lea County Exposed Facebook Page as of September 8, 2025 (Dkt. No. 97 at 1)4 • Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Whistleblower Protection Act Claim and Attached Exhibits filed in Murillo v. Lea County, No. D-506-CV-2024-00477 (Dkt. No. 99-1 at 1–116) • Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, Declaration of Curtis Waldo (Dkt. No. 90-1 at 1–2) • Plaintiff’s Exhibit 3, Declaration of Benjamin Gubernick (Dkt. No. 90-2 at 1–2) • Plaintiff’s Exhibit 4, Declaration of Jason Sanchez (Dkt. No. 90-3 at 1–2).5

Having thoroughly considered the briefs, the evidence, the parties’ arguments, and the relevant law, the Court will DENY the Motion in all respects. I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On August 7, 2025, Defendants filed the instant Motion seeking three principal forms of

to their reply as “Defendants’ Exhibit 2” and “Defendants’ Exhibit 3.” The Court then directed Plaintiff to mark previously-unmarked declarations attached to their response as “Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2,” “Plaintiff’s Exhibit 3,” and “Plaintiff’s Exhibit 4.” The Court refers to the exhibits herein in the manner in which the parties were directed to mark and re-mark them at the evidentiary hearing.

4 In their Notice of Intent to Use Exhibits at Evidentiary Hearing, Lea County Defendants identified a web address as Exhibit A: https://www.facebook.com/search/top?q=eddy%20and%20lea%20county%20exposed Dkt. No. 97 at 1. The Court instructed Defendants to “somehow” mark and send to chambers what the Court and counsel agreed was a a “snapshot” of the condition of the Eddy and Lea County Exposed Facebook page as of September 8, 2025. Defendants did not submit any document for the Court’s consideration, electronic or otherwise, apart from the web address identified in the referenced notice. When the Court attempted to use the provided link, it was directed to a message indicating that the link was “broken” or “the page may have been removed.” Because Defendants’ Exhibit 4 was not provided in a format accessible by the Court, it was not reviewed or considered for purposes of resolving the Motion.

5 In their briefing and again at the evidentiary hearing, Defendants asked the Court to strike the Declaration of Jason Sanchez in the absence of his live testimony at the hearing. As grounds, Defendants referred the Court to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12. Rule 12(f) permits a court to “strike from a pleading an insufficient defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent or scandalous matter[,]” Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(f) (emphasis added), but it does not authorize a Court to strike a declaration in the absence of live testimony. Because Defendants failed to provide any applicable authority for striking Sanchez’s declaration or to subpoena him for purposes of providing testimony at the evidentiary hearing, the Court denied Defendants’ request and has considered his declaration for purposes of resolving the Motion.

2 relief: (1) a temporary stay of discovery pending resolution of the Motion; (2) the sealing of all court records in this case; and (3) a protective order prohibiting disclosure of deposition transcripts and videos, discovery responses and disclosures, and any pleadings that rely upon or cite such items within the pleading or as an exhibit. Concurrently with the Motion, Defendants Sonia Estrada and Sean Roach each filed

Notices of Non-Appearance for their depositions, which were scheduled for August 11 and 12, 2025, respectively. See Dkt. No. 81; Dkt. No. 80. As grounds for their non-appearance, both Defendants referred to the pendency of the instant Motion. See Dkt. No. 81; Dkt. No. 80. The Notices of Non-Appearance prompted e-mail correspondence from Plaintiff’s counsel to the Court and a request for an informal discovery conference. The Court held an informal telephonic conference the next day, taking up the issue of the Notices of Non-Appearance and the related requests from Defendants that the depositions of Defendants Estrada and Roach, together with any other outstanding discovery, be delayed until after resolution of the Motion. See Dkt. No. 84. As a compromise and so that the depositions of Defendants Estrada and Roach could go

forward, Plaintiff offered a stipulation that, in the Court’s assessment, was coterminous with the relief Defendants would obtain as to the depositions if the instant Motion were granted in full: that any information of any kind generated during those depositions would remain confidential and would not be disclosed to any person other than Plaintiff’s counsel and Plaintiff.6 Id. at 3. All counsel having agreed to the stipulation articulated at the status conference, the Court entered an

6 As memorialized in the Court’s August 11, 2025 Interim Confidentiality Order, the stipulation further specified that the material to remain confidential included: (1) the deposition transcripts of Defendants Estrada and Roach or any portion of them, (2) the video depositions of Defendants Estrada and Roach and any portion of them, (3) any description of what was heard in the depositions of Defendants Estrada and Roach, and (4) any documents memorializing actions taken by the Court to resolve discovery disputes as to the subject depositions. Dkt. No. 85 at 2.

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Tello v. Lea County Board of Commissioners, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tello-v-lea-county-board-of-commissioners-nmd-2025.