A. The department of public safety shall issue a silver alert if, after review and investigation of a missing person report of a person subject to the alert, the department makes an independent determination that the missing person is a person subject to the alert.
B. The department of public safety shall develop and implement a silver alert plan for the purpose of disseminating, as rapidly as possible, information about a person subject to the alert. The plan shall:
(1) provide a procedure for the department to notify the lead station that a silver alert has been declared. The procedure shall include codes for use by the department in communicating with the lead station to prevent false alerts;
(2) provide a procedure in which other state and private print, radio, television or other media may alert members of the public of the missing person;
(3) include a procedure for notifying the department of information technology that a silver alert has been declared. The department of information technology shall immediately transmit the notification and related information to all state field operations employees so that they may be aware and vigilant in the course of their regular activities;
(4) require cellular service companies to implement silver alerts in accordance with the federal communication commission's wireless emergency alerts processes;
(5) include a procedure for notifying all local and federal law enforcement agencies that a silver alert has been declared;
(6) provide for dissemination of information about the missing person to the lead station, the department of information technology and local law enforcement agencies when a silver alert has been declared; and
(7) provide for collecting and maintaining the following records regarding each silver alert issued:
(a) the municipality where the missing person report originated;
(b) the age of the missing person;
(c) the gender of the missing person;
(d) the date of the missing person report;
(e) the date the silver alert is issued; and
(f) the date of recovery of the missing person.
C. The department of public safety shall distribute the silver alert notification plan to all local law enforcement agencies and provide such training and other assistance as is necessary to ensure that the plan can be properly implemented.
D. Once a silver alert has been declared, only the department of public safety may terminate the silver alert.
History: Laws 2013, ch. 81, § 1; 2019, ch. 50, § 2.
The 2019 amendment, effective June 14, 2019, expanded the notification and reporting requirements for missing persons who are fifty years or older or about whom there is a clear indication that the individual suffers from Alzheimer's disease or another form of dementia, regardless of age; in Subsection B, after "department", added "of public safety", and deleted former Paragraphs B(1) through B(3) and added new Paragraphs B(1) through B(7); and added Subsections C and D.
Structure New Mexico Statutes
Article 15 - Missing Persons Information and Reporting
Section 29-15-1 - Short title.
Section 29-15-2 - Definitions.
Section 29-15-3 - Missing persons information clearinghouse; function.
Section 29-15-3.1 - Endangered person advisory.
Section 29-15-3.2 - Silver alert advisory.
Section 29-15-3.3 - Brittany alert advisory.
Section 29-15-4 - State department of public education; cooperation with clearinghouse.
Section 29-15-5 - Custodian or immediate family member request for information.
Section 29-15-6 - Missing person report forms.
Section 29-15-7 - Law enforcement requirements; missing person reports; unidentified human remains.
Section 29-15-7.1 - Missing child reports; law enforcement agencies; duties; registrar.
Section 29-15-7.2 - Birth records of missing children; state registrar's duties.
Section 29-15-8 - Release of dental records; immunity.
Section 29-15-9 - Cross-checking and matching.
Section 29-15-10 - Interagency cooperation.
Section 29-15-11 - Confidentiality of records.
Section 29-15-12 - Attorney general to require compliance; removal or discipline.