Statement from Lea County, NM resident, and We the Fourth spokesman, Nick Maxwell:
Greetings from Lea County,
Blessings  continue daily. I have new   information regarding the investigation into  the Holtec-ELEA   partnership in New Mexico. On Friday, the State Auditor  officially   confirmed an open investigation of my procurement complaint  filed on   July 17, 2019.
Below, please find my recently published commentary of the government misconduct being investigated.
I’d  encourage you to share this   information in any way to build public  awareness. On social media,   please share from my public Facebook post  (linked below) or share the   link to my commentary website (https://wethefourth.org) in your new post to generate a thumbnail preview.
(https://www.facebook.com/nick.maxwell.56/posts/10156883662191791)
To date, mainstream media has not reported on this matter.
#JusticeForNewMexicans 
Nick Maxwell,
resident of Lea County
 
The Holtec Partnership, Probed
 
What the Hobbs News-Sun and Associated Press aren't reporting:
 
April 27, 2020
 
https://wethefourth.org
 
(LEA COUNTY, NM) --    This past Friday, State Auditor Brian Colón confirmed the open    investigation of a procurement complaint filed last year against the    Eddy-Lea Energy Alliance, a regional government in a partnership with    Holtec International to site a large nuclear waste storage facility in    Lea County.
Last  July, Lea County resident Nick   Maxwell brought the complaint to the  state auditor's office and   publicly issued his accompanying statement to  the press. His complaint   alleged that public officers of Eddy-Lea  Energy Alliance (ELEA) had   colluded with executives of Holtec in a  joint-effort to defraud a   competitive public procurement. Notably absent  from the mainstream   media outlets has been any report about the state's  receipt of   Maxwell's complaint for prohibited bidding.
Equipped  with New Mexico's inspection   statutes, Maxwell had obtained the invoice  of the attorney who had  been  commissioned by ELEA to draft a revenue  sharing deal in the later   months of 2015. According to the invoice, this  deal was secretly   slipped exclusively to Holtec in anticipation of  ELEA's announcement of   a competitive public procurement offering the  purchase of the group's   publicly owned surface rights for the purpose of  siting a nuclear   storage facility. Not long thereafter and near the  beginning of 2016,   the deal was kicked back to ELEA within Holtec's  sealed proposal at the   end of public procurement.
The  attorney had been tasked with   preparing the terms which outlined this  procurement. Per those terms,   proposals from the public would have to  include a revenue sharing deal   for consideration.
Maxwell  has alleged ELEA's tax-funded   kickback deal was a bribe: a fabricated  promise returned by Holtec for   allocating no less than 30% of their  future revenues to ELEA should   Holtec receive a facility license from  the Nuclear Regulatory   Commission and get everything operational. In  effect, future costs   associated with Holtec's storage facility may  become artificially   inflated to afford the "30% bribery cuts" that will  get regularly paid   out to ELEA for their enduring "local public  support".
Even  in the state of New Mexico, white   collar crimes such as bribery can be  charged as racketeering scams   when organizations attempt to pass off  their crime as legitimate   business activities. If held liable for  commissioning their   henchman-in-fact attorney to broker a bribe,  the energy alliance could   face asset forfeiture of Holtec's promised  land to the State of New   Mexico as well as involuntary judicial  dissolution of the local   government-owned limited liability company.
John  Heaton, longtime chief officer of   ELEA and former state representative  in the Democratic Party, has  kept  his high seat on the board of  directors of the energy alliance  despite  the investigation.
Maxwell commented on the auditor's investigation,    "The people of New Mexico demand and deserve transparency, honesty,   and  integrity from their public officials. This organized effort from   ELEA  and their partner to broker a favorable bribe had resulted in a    less-than-competitive public procurement and should be exposed as a    criminal racket funded from the public treasury. Any billion-dollar bid    rigging conspiracy like this must be brought to justice for New   Mexicans  before it is too late."
author: Nick Maxwell
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