New Mexico investigates school's hiring of sex abuse suspect

1New Mexico's attorney general is launching an investigation into how the state's largest school district hired Martinez as a high-level administrator who faces child sex abuse charges in Colorado.
2Jason Martinez is seen in this Denver Police Department booking...
3FILE - This Jan. 29, 2015 file photo shows New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas talking during a news conference in Albuquerque, N.M. Balderas, is launching an investigation into how the state's largest school district hired a high-level administrator who faces child sex abuse charges.
4Balderas announced Monday, Aug. 24, his office will look into why Albuquerque Public Schools' safety protocols were breached and Jason Martinez was hired in June before a background check was completed.
5FILE - This Jan. 29, 2015 file photo shows New Mexico Attorney...
6ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) - New Mexico's attorney general said Monday he will investigate how the state's largest school district hired a high-level administrator who faces child sex abuse charges in Colorado.
7The district's new superintendent, meanwhile, faces increasing pressure to resign over the debacle.
8Attorney General Hector Balderas announced his office will look into why Albuquerque Public Schools' safety protocols were dismissed and former deputy superintendent Jason Martinez was hired in June before a background check was completed.
9Superintendent Luis Valentino hired Martinez to head the district's instruction and technology division.
10Martinez resigned abruptly last week.
11It later surfaced that he faces four felony counts of sexual assault on a child in Colorado involving two victims.
12Two previous counts have been dismissed, according to the Denver District Attorney's Office.
13A lawyer for Karen Rudys, the district's interim assistant superintendent for human resources, said Valentino was informed multiple times about Martinez refusing to complete his background check but ignored those concerns.
14"This was a horrific breach of trust for the parents of APS," Balderas told The Associated Press on Monday.
15He stopped short of saying if his office would seek criminal charges, but he said the office will see if the district conducted necessary criminal background checks on other employees.
16Valentino was selected for the superintendent post in June, and the school board plans to vote Thursday on whether he should be dismissed.
17In a statement, Valentino said he welcomes Balderas' investigation and believes staff and students' safety is important.
18"We will work cooperatively with the AG's office to strengthen these processes and procedures and to ensure that they are followed with fidelity, which is in the best interest of our students, employees and community," Valentino said.
19He did not address the controversy about Martinez's hiring or comment on his future with the district.
20Valentino was associate superintendent/chief academic officer in the San Francisco Unified School District from July 2012 to June 30.
21He was an employee in good standing, and the district is not conducting an inquiry about his hiring practices while in San Francisco, said Gentle Blythe, a school district spokeswoman.
22He was selected for the Albuquerque district's top job following a national search.
23The school board met behind closed doors for five hours late Sunday to discuss the controversy.
24An audience crowded the meeting, and some demanded that Valentino step down.
25President Don Duran read a statement apologizing for the Martinez controversy.
26Board member Steven Michael Quezada said Valentino's hiring of Martinez without a background check was "unrecoverable," and he think it's best for the district and the new superintendent to part ways.
27"Part of me thinks we'd be doing him a favor. It's just too hostile for him now," Quezada said.
28"I know he moved his family here, and he bought a house. But it's just not fixable."
29Denver Public Schools officials did not immediately return a phone call seeking information about Martinez.
30The Denver Post reported Martinez won a districtwide award in 2011 for helping design The Digital Door Project, which gathers data for teachers and principals, including individual student data, to help improve standardized test scores.
31Records show police arrested Martinez on July 18, 2013, on suspicion of sexual assault involving two children.
32According to an affidavit, authorities allege Martinez assaulted a child who was in his care.
33Another alleged victim reported that Martinez sexually assaulted him while on a trip to Las Vegas.
34No phone listing could be found for Martinez, and a message seeking comment from his attorney, Michael Meaux, was not immediately returned.
35Martinez faces five charges of sexual assault on a child involving a victim under the age of 15, and one involving a child under the age of 18.
36The assaults allegedly happened in 2012 and 2013.
37Martinez's trial in that case is scheduled for Oct. 9.
38One victim told police he came forward because "Jay has been touching people."
39The children knew Martinez as Jay.
40Martinez also faces a domestic violence charge for allegedly striking two men in a nightclub district in January.
41The next hearing in that case is scheduled for Oct. 18.
42Denver District Attorney's Office spokeswoman Lynn Kimbrough said the office filed a motion Monday to revoke the bond in Martinez's two current cases.
43This story has been corrected to say the Denver district attorney's office filed a motion Monday to revoke bond.
44Banda reported from Denver.