New Mexico Statutes
Article 16 - Governmental Conduct
Section 10-16-8 - Contracts involving former public officers or employees; representation of clients after government service.

A. A state agency shall not enter into a contract with, or take any action favorably affecting, any person or business that is:
(1) represented personally in the matter by a person who has been a public officer or employee of the state within the preceding year if the value of the contract or action is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000) and the contract is a direct result of an official act by the public officer or employee; or
(2) assisted in the transaction by a former public officer or employee of the state whose official act, while in state employment, directly resulted in the agency's making that contract or taking that action.
B. A former public officer or employee shall not represent a person in the person's dealings with the government on a matter in which the former public officer or employee participated personally and substantially while a public officer or employee.
C. A local government agency shall not enter into a contract with, or take any action favorably affecting, any person or business that is:
(1) represented personally in the matter by a person who has been a public officer or employee of that local government agency within the preceding year if the value of the contract or action is in excess of one thousand dollars ($1,000) and the contract is a direct result of an official act by the public officer or employee; or
(2) assisted in the transaction by a former public officer or employee of that political subdivision of the state whose official act, while in employment with that political subdivision of the state, directly resulted in the agency's making that contract or taking that action.
D. For a period of one year after leaving government service or employment, a former public officer or employee shall not represent for pay a person before the state agency or local government agency at which the former public officer or employee served or worked.
History: 1953 Comp., § 5-12-8, enacted by Laws 1967, ch. 306, § 8; 1983, ch. 90, § 2; 1993, ch. 46, § 32; 2011, ch. 138, § 9.
The 2011 amendment, effective July 1, 2011, added a new Subsection C to provide limitations on contracting by local government agencies with former public officers and employees; and relettered the succeeding subsection.
The 1993 amendment, effective July 1, 1993, rewrote the section heading, which read "Contracts involving former employees"; inserted the subsection designation "A" at the beginning, redesignated Subsections A and B as Paragraphs (1) and (2), and added Subsections B and C; and, in Subsection A, inserted "public officer or" in three places and made minor stylistic changes.
Subsection C [now Subsection D] not unconstitutional regulation of law practice. — The application of Subsection C [D] to former executive branch attorneys is not an attempt by the legislature to regulate the practice of law and the provision does not violate separation of powers. Ortiz v. Taxation & Revenue Dep't, 1998-NMCA-027, 124 N.M. 677, 954 P.2d 109.
Construction with Rule 16-111 NMRA. — Subsection C [now Subsection D] and Rule 16-111 NMRA, prohibiting an attorney in private practice from representing a client in a matter in which the attorney participated personally and substantially while a public officer or employee, prohibit different types of conduct and are not in conflict. Ortiz v. Taxation & Revenue Dep't, 1998-NMCA-027, 124 N.M. 677, 954 P.2d 109.
Restrictions on former public lawyer's representation of a third-party in dealings with the government. — It is a violation of the Governmental Conduct Act, 10-16-1 to 10-16-8 NMSA 1978, for a lawyer, formerly employed with the New Mexico environment department (NMED), to represent a third party seeking to enforce a consent order that he had a personal and substantial role in negotiating, drafting, executing and enforcing while employed with the NMED, and where NMED is an adverse party in the litigation, because 10-16-8(B) NMSA 1978 prohibits a former public officer or employee from representing a person in the person's dealings with the government on a matter in which the former pubic officer or employee participated personally and substantially while a public officer or employee. 2020 Op. Ethics Comm'n No. 2020-02.

Structure New Mexico Statutes

New Mexico Statutes

Chapter 10 - Public Officers and Employees

Article 16 - Governmental Conduct

Section 10-16-1 - Short title.

Section 10-16-2 - Definitions.

Section 10-16-3 - Ethical principles of public service; certain official acts prohibited; penalty.

Section 10-16-3.1 - Prohibited political activities.

Section 10-16-4 - Official act for personal financial interest prohibited; disqualification from official act; providing a penalty.

Section 10-16-4.1 - Honoraria prohibited.

Section 10-16-4.2 - Disclosure of outside employment.

Section 10-16-4.3 - Prohibited employment.

Section 10-16-5 - Repealed.

Section 10-16-6 - Confidential information.

Section 10-16-7 - Contracts involving public officers or employees.

Section 10-16-8 - Contracts involving former public officers or employees; representation of clients after government service.

Section 10-16-9 - Contracts involving legislators; representation before state agencies.

Section 10-16-10 - Repealed.

Section 10-16-11 - Codes of conduct.

Section 10-16-11.1 - State agency or local government agency authority.

Section 10-16-12 - Repealed.

Section 10-16-13 - Prohibited bidding.

Section 10-16-13.1 - Education and voluntary compliance.

Section 10-16-13.2 - Certain business sales to the employees of state agencies and local government agencies prohibited.

Section 10-16-13.3 - Prohibited contributions; financial service contractors.

Section 10-16-14 - Enforcement procedures.

Section 10-16-15 - Repealed.

Section 10-16-16 - Recompiled.

Section 10-16-17 - Criminal penalties.

Section 10-16-18 - Enforcement; civil penalties.