N.M. Stat. Ann. § 29-15A-3
A. The state police shall develop and implement an AMBER alert notification plan for the purpose of disseminating, as rapidly as possible, information about a child abduction so that law enforcement agencies and citizens throughout the state may be aware and vigilant. The plan shall:
(6) provide for dissemination of information about a child or a child's abductor to the lead station, the department of information technology and local law enforcement agencies when an AMBER alert has been declared.
B. The state police shall distribute the AMBER alert notification plan to all local law enforcement agencies and provide such training and other assistance as is necessary to ensure that the plan can be properly implemented.
C. The authorized requester may declare an AMBER alert when the requester has reason to believe that:
(3) there is specific information available about the child or the child's abductor that may assist in an expedient and successful end to the abduction.
D. Once an AMBER alert has been declared, only the authorized requester may terminate the AMBER alert.
History: Laws 2003, ch. 93, § 3; 2005, ch. 142, § 1; 2007, ch. 290, § 24; 2013, ch. 51, § 1.
The 2013 amendment, effective June 14, 2013, expanded the reasons for declaring an AMBER alert to include abduction by a person related to the child; and in Paragraph (1) of Subsection C, after "has been abducted", deleted "by an unrelated person".
The 2007 amendment, effective July 1, 2007, required the AMBER alert notification plan to provide for notification to and transmission of information by the department of information technology.
The 2005 amendment, effective July 1, 2005, added Subsection A(4) to require that the AMBER notification plan include a procedure for notifying each cellular and paging service company in New Mexico so that a message may be sent to the company’s customers at no additional expense to the person who accepts the information and delivers it to the cellular or paging service company.