New Mexico

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://dspace.d106.bravog.com/handle/123456789/1828

Welcome to the Colorado Collection

This collection serves as a dedicated repository for academic research, historical documentation, and case studies related to Colorado. It focuses on the historical evolution, cultural developments, and legal frameworks within the state of Colorado. This collection offers valuable resources for scholars, researchers, and individuals interested in the rich heritage and historical significance of Colorado.

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Now showing 1 - 7 of 7
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    1909 N.M. Laws 333-34, ch. 117, § 8.
    (General Publisher, 1909)
    That villages incorporated under this act shall have the power by ordinance, to prevent the presence within their limits of anything dangerous, offensive, unhealthy or indecent and to cause any nuisance to be abated; to regulate the transportation, storage and keeping of gun-powder and other combustibles and explosives, oils, gasoline and other articles which may endanger the property of such village[.]
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    1923 N.M. Laws 179, ch. 115, § 2.
    (General Publisher, 1923)
    Provided that the use of explosives to destroy any building, structure, or train, or to injure or scare any human being constitutes a felony
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    1923 N.M. Laws 179, ch. 115, § 1.
    (General Publisher, 1923)
    Any person who knowingly transports or takes into or upon any public service passenger car or passenger coach in the State of New Mexico, any bomb, dynamite, nitro-glycerine, vigorite, Giant or Hercules powder, gunpowder or other chemical compound or explosive shall be guilty of a felony and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by imprisonment for a term of not less than three years nor more than five years.
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    1921 N.M. Laws 57-58, ch. 35, § 16.
    (General Publisher, 1921)
    No game shall be pursued, taken, wounded or killed in the night, or with a steel or hard pointed bullet or with any weapon other than an ordinary shoulder gun or pistol, and the use of high powered rifles in hunting and taking migratory game birds is hereby prohibited.
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    1921 N.M. Laws 58-59, ch. 36, §§ 1-2.
    (General Publisher, 1921)
    Any person who, with intent to commit crime, breaks and enters either by day or by night, any building whether inhabited or not, and opens or attempts to open any vault, safe or other secure place by use of nitro-glycerine, dynamite, gunpowder or any other explosive, shall be deemed guilty of burglary with explosives.
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    1921 N.M. Laws 201-02, ch. 113, §§ 1-4
    (General Publisher, 1921)
    Prohibited the use, possession, or control of any shotgun or rifle by noncitizen; violators subject to fine, imprisonment, and confiscation and resale of shotgun or rifle
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    1915 N.M. Law 153, ch. 101, §7.
    (General Publisher, 1915)
    No person shall at any time shoot, hunt or take in any manner any wild animals or birds or game fish as herein defined in this state without first having in his or her possession a hunting license as hereinafter provided for the year in which such shooting, fishing or hunting is done. The presence of any person in any open field, prairie or forest, whether enclosed or not with traps, gun or other weapon for hunting, without having in possession a proper hunting license as herein provided, shall be prima facie evidence of the violation of this section.