By Nico Roesler The New Mexican T he memories of Victoriano Moises Byrne-Gonzales — and there are many — are enough to make his family laugh. “I can’t believe it’s been almost two years without him. We still feel his presence,” said Barbara Byrne, Byrne-Gonzales’ mother, while gaz- ing at his son, Zaid- ynn — a 15-month- old smile machine. More than a year and a half after Byrne-Gonzales, 21, was stabbed to death, and nearly a month after the man accused of killing him was acquitted of first- and second-degree murder, his family finds some comfort in memories. But they didn’t get the justice they sought against Adrian Gonzales, they said, and that’s what hurts the most. “Moises was trying to protect a woman. He died for a reason, with a purpose,” Byrne said. “We want vali- dation that we, everyone, will be pro- tected and that our lives are valuable.” On Thursday, Byrne and several other family members met with prose- cutors at the District Attorney’s Office to discuss strategies for moving for- ward with the case against Gonzales. Gonzales, no relation to Byrne- Gonzales, was accused of stabbing Byrne-Gonzales in the throat after he and a friend, Santiago Cordova, tried breaking up a fight between Gonzales and his girlfriend at the Butterfly Springs Mobile Home Park in Pojoaque on Dec. 2, 2011. On the witness stand, Gonzales claimed he stabbed both Byrne-Gonzales and Cordova in self-defense, and that Byrne-Gonzales had lured him into a fight. Cordova was stabbed in the back. By Michael Melia and Ted Shaffrey The Associated Press NEWTOWN, Conn. — When Adam Lanza walked out of his house for the last time, he left behind firearms and knives and more than 1,600 rounds of ammunition — taking only four guns. They would suffice. He loaded the weapons into his car, drove to Sandy Hook Ele- mentary School, blasted his way into the building and within five minutes fired off 154 shots with a Bushmaster .223-caliber rifle. Having slaughtered 20 first-graders and six educators, he killed himself with a shot from a Glock hand- gun. He still had more than 100 rifle bullets at hand. Warrants released Thursday provide the most insight to date into the world of the 20-year-old gunman, a recluse who played violent video games in a house packed with weaponry that was all too real. The inventory of items found in the spacious, colonial-style home included books on autism, a vast array of weapon paraphernalia and images of what appears to be a dead person covered with plastic and blood. The weapons used in the shooting had Four sections, 24 pages Pasatiempo, 56 pages 164th year, No. 88 Publication No. 596-440 Editor: Rob Dean, 986-3033, [email protected] Main office: 983-3303 Late paper: 986-3010 Calendar A-2 Classifieds D-2 Comics B-6 Lotteries A-2 Opinion A-5 Police notes C-2 Sports B-1 Time Out B-5 Generation Next D-1 Index By Tom Sharpe The New Mexican A District Court judge urged a family Thursday to try to heal their rift over a man’s exhumation by participating in a restorative justice process — but the three close relatives of a couple who moved their son’s grave said they would rather live under a court order to avoid the couple for a decade. “I don’t want their friendship,” the couple’s granddaughter told the judge. “I don’t want to be part of their family.” George M. and Teresita Bachicha of Cañada de los Alamos had sought a domestic-violence retraining order against Teresita’s mother, Rose A. Moya; their daughter, Georgia Bachicha, and Georgia’s daughter, Rachel Serna, and continue to seek a civil restraining order against Teresita Bachicha’s sister, Fran- cesquita Moya Flores, and Flores’ daugh- ter, Diane Velarde. The Bachichas say their relatives are harassing them because they had their son’s body moved from a church graveyard a few feet from their house in Cañada de los Alamos to the Rosario Cemetery in Santa Fe earlier this year. Georgie A. Bachicha died March 7, 2011, from an overdose of alcohol and pain- killers. According to the Bachichas’ hand- written complaint, the relatives who opposed the exhumation have repeat- The New Mexican Two men arrested in separate incidents this week were charged with their fourth and fifth counts of DWI — as well as charges of child abuse, as both were driving with small children as passengers. Santa Fe County sheriff’s deputies arrested Anthony Montoya, 30, of Santa Fe on Wednesday evening on a charge of DWI, his fifth according to jail records, and child abuse while driving with his 4-year-old daughter in the back of his 2002 Dodge sedan on Placita Road, according to Capt. Adan Mendoza of the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office. Mendoza said Montoya’s breath alcohol content taken at the scene was 0.23 — almost three times the legal limit for driving. At about 6 p.m. Tuesday, Santa Fe police arrested Ricardo Jimenez- The New Mexican’s Weekly Magazine of Arts, Entertainment & Culture March 29, 2013 A look at Aspen Santa Fe Ballet’s Sam Chittenden Inside Locally owned and independent Friday, March 29, 2013 www.santafenewmexican.com $1.25 Child passengers boost DWI charges Ricardo Jimenez- Arana Anthony Montoya Two men arrested in separate incidents have multiple convictions of driving while intoxicated VIOLENCE BY THE NUMBERS 1,600 Number of rounds of ammunition found in Adam Lanza’s home. 154 Number of shots fired within the first five minutes at the school. 100 Number of rifle bul- lets left after Lanza killed 20 children, six adults and himself. SANDY HOOK MASSACRE Arsenal found at shooter’s home Search warrants unveil ammunition, swords and insight into gunman’s world ‘We still feel his presence’ Today Partly sunny. High 69, low 38. PAGE C-4 Obituaries Alina Bourger, 21, Las Cruces, March 27 John E. DeVito, 63, Truchas, March 4 Guadalupe N. Romero, 90, Pojoaque, March 26 Melvin Clayton ‘Mel’ Root, 79, Las Vegas, N.M., March 26 J.W. Sellers, Santa Fe, March 27 George M. Stone, 86, Santa Fe, March 26 Erik Sverre, 49, Santa Fe, March 19 PAGE C-2 Teens keep the faith Youth groups strive to better themselves and their community through their religion. GENERATION NEXT, D-1 Moises Byrne- Gonzales Family of slain Santa Fe man continues to seek justice for abuse victims News ‘on the go’ reflects mobile habits By Craig Timberg The Washington Post Many this week celebrated the lat- est tech wunderkind, a British teenager who made a fortune selling an app that boils down news reports, no matter how important or complex, into a pithy 400 characters. But for some of those who prefer heartier servings of news, the development carried at least a whiff of the apocalypse. For perspective: On Summly, the app that Yahoo! bought from 17-year-old Nick D’Aloisio for $30 million, this article would already be done, having ended midway through the word “D’Aloisio.” His fortune-making insight was that people on the go — in line for coffee or killing time between innings of a baseball game — may want no more information than can fit on the screen of a typical smartphone. This service is made pos- Please see DWI, Page A-4 Please see ARSENAL, Page A-4 Please see MOBILE, Page A-4 Clockwise, from left: Shaila Roybal, the fiancée of Victoriano Moises Byrne-Gonzales, who died after a stabbing in a Pojoaque mobile home park; Roybal’s sister, Patricia Roybal; Byrne Gonzales’ mother, Barbara Byrne; his sister, Amelia; and his 15-month-old son, Zaidynn, who was born just days after his death, are shown at the state Capitol on Thursday. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN Please see JUSTICE, Page A-4 Words won’t heal rift over exhumation, family says Please see RIFT, Page A-4 INSIDE u Obama urges nation to remember vic- tims by tightening gun laws. PAGE A-3