A. The commission has jurisdiction to enforce the applicable civil compliance provisions for public officials, public employees, candidates, persons subject to the Campaign Reporting Act [1-19-25 to 1-19-36 NMSA 1978], government contractors, lobbyists and lobbyists’ employers of:
(1) the Campaign Reporting Act;
(2) the Financial Disclosure Act [Chapter 10, Article 16A NMSA 1978];
(3) the Gift Act [10-16B-1 to 10-16B-4 NMSA 1978];
(4) the Lobbyist Regulation Act [Chapter 2, Article 11 NMSA 1978];
(5) the Voter Action Act [1-19A-1 to 1-19A-17 NMSA 1978];
(6) the Governmental Conduct Act [Chapter 10, Article 16 NMSA 1978];
(7) the Procurement Code [13-1-28 to 13-1-199 NMSA 1978];
(8) the State Ethics Commission Act;
(9) the Revised Uniform Law on Notarial Acts [14-14A-1 to 14-14A-32 NMSA 1978]; and
(10) Article 9, Section 14 of the constitution of New Mexico.
B. All complaints filed with a public agency regarding the statutes listed in Subsection A of this section shall be forwarded to the commission.
C. The commission may choose to act on some or all aspects of a complaint and forward other aspects of a complaint to another state or federal agency with jurisdiction over the matter in accordance with Subsection E of this section.
D. If the commission decides not to act on a complaint, whether the complaint was filed with the commission or forwarded from another public agency, or decides only to act on part of a complaint, the commission shall promptly forward the complaint, or any part of a complaint on which it does not wish to act, to the public agency that has appropriate jurisdiction within ten days of the decision. The complainant and respondent shall be notified in writing when the complainant’s request has been forwarded to another agency unless otherwise provided pursuant to Subsection H of Section 10-16G-10 NMSA 1978.
E. The commission may share jurisdiction with other public agencies having authority to act on a complaint or any aspect of a complaint. Such shared jurisdiction shall be formalized through an agreement entered into by all participating agencies involved with the complaint and the director. The commission may also investigate a complaint referred to the commission by the legislature, or a legislative committee, in accordance with an agreement entered into pursuant to policies of the New Mexico legislative council or rules of the house of representatives or senate.
F. The commission may file a court action to enforce the civil compliance provisions of an act listed in Subsection A of this section. The court action shall be filed in the district court in the county where the defendant resides.
History: Laws 2019, ch. 86, § 9; 2021, ch. 21, § 33; 2021, ch. 109, § 16.
ANNOTATIONS
2021 Multiple Amendments. — Laws 2021, ch. 21, § 33, effective January 1, 2022, and Laws 2021, ch. 109, § 16, effective July 1, 2021, enacted different amendments to this section that can be reconciled. Pursuant to 12-1-8 NMSA 1978, Laws 2021, ch. 109, § 16, as the last act signed by the governor, is set out above and incorporates both amendments. The amendments enacted by Laws 2021, ch. 21, § 33 and Laws 2021, ch. 109, § 16 are described below. To view the session laws in their entirety, see the 2021 session laws on NMOneSource.com.
The nature of the difference between the amendments is that Laws 2021, ch. 21, § 33, included the Revised Uniform Law on Notarial Acts in the list of acts over which the state ethics commission has jurisdiction to enforce, and Laws 2021, ch. 109, § 16, required that court actions filed pursuant to this section be filed in the district court in the county where the defendant resides.
Laws 2021, ch. 21, § 33, effective January 1, 2022, included the Revised Uniform Law on Notarial Acts in the list of acts over which the state ethics commission has jurisdiction to enforce, and made a technical amendment; in Subsection A, added a new Paragraph A(9) and redesignated former Paragraph A(9) as Paragraph A(10); and in Subsection D, after “Subsection H of Section”, deleted “10 of the State Ethics Commission Act” and added “10-16G-10 NMSA 1978”.
Laws 2021, ch. 109, § 16, effective July 1, 2021, required that court actions filed pursuant to this section be filed in the district court in the county where the defendant resides; and in Subsection F, after “in the county where the”, deleted “respondent” and added “defendant”.