THE EPSTIEN INVESTIGATION AND SELECTIVE ACCOUNTABILITY

(Online Version): https://www.abortionfreenm.com/news/the-epstein-investigation-and-selective-accountability

Is New Mexico leadership ready for global scrutiny?​

By Bud Shaver,

Albuquerque, New Mexico — As New Mexico proceeds with its investigation connected to Jeffrey Epstein's former Zorro Ranch, Abortion Free New Mexico (AFNM) is raising serious concerns about institutional credibility, selective accountability, and structural conflicts of interest within the state's long-standing political infrastructure.



For nearly a century, New Mexico has operated under sustained Democratic legislative control. During that time, the state has consistently ranked near the bottom nationally in education outcomes and has struggled with persistent crime challenges.

Now the public is being asked to trust that this same political infrastructure will conduct a fearless, independent, and transparent investigation into one of the most notorious criminal networks in modern history.

Jeffrey Epstein maintained property and operations at Zorro Ranch in New Mexico for years. Civil litigation and survivor testimony have alleged exploitation connected to that property. The national outrage surrounding Epstein was not only about criminal acts — it was about institutional failure: failure to investigate aggressively, failure to confront power, and failure to expose wrongdoing in real time.

AFNM is not alleging that state officials enabled Epstein.

But it is asking a serious question:

"If transparency has been reduced in politically sensitive areas, why should unquestioned trust now be assumed in a high-profile investigation involving power and influence?"

Abortion Policy, Reduced Oversight, and Moral Framing

In recent legislative sessions, pro-abortion leaders have expanded abortion policy while simultaneously diminishing oversight and narrowing public transparency safeguards.

  • Uniform statewide abortion reporting has been reduced.
  • Public statistical visibility has diminished.
  • Shield protections have expanded.
  • Oversight efforts have been reframed as hostility rather than accountability.


At the same time, moral and religious language has been publicly invoked in defense of abortion expansion policy.

During testimony on SB 30, Senator Cindy Nava (D) stated:

"As one of the only four women on this committee, as a Catholic and as an immigrant, I think it's important to note that the majority of those speaking on this issue are men… I want to thank you, Senator Wirth, for bringing this legislation forward because our voices certainly aren't interpreted by statements that gentlemen make."

Click here or on the post below to watch Senator Cindy Nava (D) during SB 30 testimony. The video begins directly at her remarks.

​Following that hearing, Senator Nava became a sponsor of the legislation.

AFNM emphasizes three elements that contribute to public skepticism:

  • The invocation of Catholic identity in support of abortion expansion policy — in clear contradiction to longstanding Catholic doctrine on the sanctity of life.
  • The framing of male opposition as less legitimate in public debate.
  • The fact that SB 30 — reducing abortion reporting safeguards — was introduced and advanced by male legislative leadership.


Both the invocation of Catholic identity in contradiction to Church teaching and the selective disqualification of dissent based on gender undermine credibility.

Relying on male legislative leadership to introduce and advance abortion expansion legislation — while dismissing male opposition as illegitimate — exposes a contradiction that weakens institutional trust.

When abortion expansion, diminished oversight, and contradictory moral framing converge, skepticism is not partisan — it is the predictable result of inconsistent governance.

Catholic Doctrine and Public Accountability

The Catholic Church's teaching on abortion is longstanding and unequivocal. The Catechism affirms that human life must be respected and protected from conception and that direct abortion constitutes grave moral matter.

In 2017, the Catholic bishops of New Mexico — including Archbishop John C. Wester — publicly stated that it is not appropriate for Catholic elected officials to invoke their Catholic faith while advocating for abortion policy. The bishops clarified that support for abortion is "not morally permissible" and that presenting personal opinions contrary to Church teaching creates confusion and scandal among the faithful.​

AFNM does not claim the authority to render canonical or ecclesiastical judgments; however, the doctrinal tension is publicly documented. When Catholic identity is invoked in legislative debate while advancing abortion expansion in direct conflict with longstanding Church teaching, the inconsistency is not merely political — it is theological.

Statement from Tara Shaver

"When pro-abortion leaders expand abortion policy, sponsor bills that shield accountability and reduce transparency, rebuke the faith community, lecture men for speaking on life issues — even as male leaders introduce and advance those same bills — and invoke their Catholic faith in support of abortion policy, it reveals both a structural conflict of interest and a profound conflict of integrity. When moral claims and legislative action diverge, skepticism is not extreme — it is warranted. And when moral reasoning is inconsistent, the public is justified in closely examining the integrity of the laws that result."
— Tara Shaver, Spokesperson, Abortion Free New Mexico

A Credibility Test for Leadership — Beyond New Mexico


New Mexico's long-standing political leadership has shaped the state's governance structure for decades. During that time, the state has frequently ranked near the bottom nationally in key education indicators, including reading and math proficiency scores, and has consistently faced elevated violent crime rates compared to national averages.

These are documented, publicly reported statistics.

While many factors contribute to complex social outcomes, these measurable outcomes reflect institutional performance and oversight culture.

Now, that same political infrastructure is asking the public — and the nation — to trust that it will conduct a fearless, independent investigation into allegations connected to one of the most notorious criminal networks in modern history.

The implications extend far beyond New Mexico.

Epstein's network drew national and international scrutiny. Allegations tied to Zorro Ranch are not confined to local politics. The need for accountability, prosecutorial rigor, and institutional independence carries national and global consequences.

When leadership has:

  • Diminished transparency safeguards in one policy arena,
  • Expanded politically protected sectors in another,
  • Struggled to improve measurable outcomes in education,
  • And faced persistently high crime rates,


skepticism does not arise from partisanship — it arises from performance history.

"When abortion expansion, diminished oversight, and contradictory moral framing converge, skepticism is not partisan — it is the predictable result of inconsistent governance," Shaver stated.

"If this investigation is to restore confidence — not just in New Mexico, but nationally and internationally — leaders must demonstrate transparency that exceeds the minimum standard. When credibility is on the line, independence should be invited, not feared."

Ultimately, the question is simple:

​Will New Mexico demonstrate the level of independence required when power, influence, and global scrutiny converge — or will it repeat the institutional hesitations the Epstein case has already exposed?

Credibility will not be measured by statements.

It will be measured by evidence.

Final Conclusion

New Mexico's leadership is now asking the public — and the world — to trust that it will conduct a fearless, independent investigation into allegations tied to one of the most notorious criminal networks in modern history.

But context matters.

In the most recent legislative session, transparency was not expanded — it was narrowed. Reporting safeguards were reduced. Oversight mechanisms were weakened. Public visibility was diminished.

When transparency contracts in one arena while leaders ask for unquestioned trust in another, skepticism is not partisan — it is rational.

Credibility cannot be declared — it must be proven. It is proven through independent investigators free from political conflicts, full subpoena authority with documented evidence, public hearings and sworn testimony, written prosecutorial findings, disclosed conflicts of interest, and a final report grounded in verifiable documentation — not narrative summaries.

Transparency must be proactive. Oversight must be visible. Accountability must be measurable. Anything less invites doubt.

And when the stakes extend beyond state borders — when national and international confidence are on the line — anything less is unacceptable.

Abortion Free New Mexico (AFNM) is a watchdog organization dedicated to investigating abortion practices, documenting patient harm and regulatory gaps, and promoting transparency, accountability, and enforcement of healthcare standards in New Mexico.

Our Vision 

We seek a New Mexico where abortion no longer exists, preborn children are protected, and all medical care is governed by rigorous standards, public accountability, and respect for human life.

AbortionFreeNM.com

Abortion Free New Mexico leaders Bud and Tara Shaver have served as full-time pro-life missionaries in New Mexico since 2010, focusing on investigative research, public documentation, and outreach.

Their work has drawn national attention, with critics describing them as among the country's most outspoken opponents of abortion.

In collaboration with Operation Rescue and Fr. Stephen Imbarrato, the Shavers conducted groundbreaking investigative research that brought national scrutiny to New Mexico's abortion practices, helping establish the state as a destination for late-term abortions based on publicly documented findings and national reporting.

Following the U.S. Supreme Court's Dobbs decision, the Shavers' work has expanded to document the sharp increase in out-of-state abortion travel into New Mexico, often referred to as abortion tourism, and the resulting strain on oversight, transparency, and patient safety. Today, Abortion Free New Mexico is pressing state and federal lawmakers to address the lack of routine licensing, inspections, and accountability for abortion clinics operating in New Mexico.


Learn more about why New Mexico became a focal point: