Abortion Free New Mexico says the information existed and was accessible — ignoring it was a deliberate choice
By Bud Shaver,
Albuquerque, New Mexico — Abortion Free New Mexico (AFNM) is releasing Part Two of its report, From Zorro Ranch to Abortion Tourism, as Senate Bill 30 (SB 30) advances through the New Mexico Legislature — warning that the same culture of secrecy that once shielded Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch is now beingcodified into abortion policy, while local media continue to ignore years of documented reporting.
For years, AFNM has published primary-source reports documenting New Mexico’s lack of abortion clinic regulation, statutory exemptions, inspection gaps, and missing public accountability. Those findings were made public, cited to law and records, and shared with policymakers.
Yet as SB 30 moves to eliminate abortion reporting requirements altogether, New Mexico’s major media outlets have provided virtually no sustained coverage of AFNM’s documented findings.
“We didn’t just start covering this — we’ve been documenting abortion oversight failures for years,” said Tara Shaver, who has led Abortion Free New Mexico’s investigative reporting on abortion regulation.
“SB 30 is what happens when warnings are ignored and secrecy is rewarded.”
Part One of AFNM’s report documented how New Mexico’s tolerance for secrecy — visible for years at Zorro Ranch — allowed powerful interests to operate with little oversight.
Part Two focuses on what followed: institutional silence.
“At Zorro Ranch, records were sealed, access was limited, and scrutiny came only after national exposure,” Shaver said.
“With abortion oversight, the records already exist — but the press is choosing not to examine them.”

This figure traces the progression from institutional secrecy surrounding Zorro Ranch to current legislative efforts to eliminate abortion reporting under SB 30, illustrating how the absence of scrutiny—rather than a lack of information—has shaped policy outcomes in New Mexico.
“When journalists avoid records that challenge power, silence becomes policy,”Shaver said.
AFNM has documented that abortion facilities in New Mexico:
- operate under exemptions not applied to comparable healthcare providers,
- are not subject to routine facility-level licensing,
- provide limited public reporting on injuries and complications,
- and receive taxpayer involvement without transparency.
Despite this, media coverage of SB 30 has focused largely on political narratives, while ignoring the documented regulatory record already in the public domain.
AFNM’s findings build on its previously published analysis, New Mexico’s Abortion Oversight Gap: Expanded Access Without Routine Health Inspections, which documents how abortion facilities in New Mexico operate without routine facility-level inspections required of comparable healthcare providers. That analysis, published prior to the introduction of SB 30, warned that expanding access without transparency or enforcement creates systemic accountability failures.
“This isn’t a lack of information — it’s a refusal to investigate,” Shaver added.
“When journalists avoid records that challenge power, silence becomes policy.”
Fear Replaces Facts
As SB 30 advanced, sponsors increasingly reframed the debate around fear-based claims, asserting that abortion reporting endangers providers — rather than addressing enforcement of existing law or public accountability.AFNM notes that abortion reporting:
- does not disclose patient identities,
- does not expose providers to public targeting,
- and exists to ensure data integrity, patient safety, and enforcement of existing law.
“Transparency is standard in healthcare,” Shaver said.
“When reporting is portrayed as dangerous, it’s because someone doesn’t want the outcomes examined.”

AFNM warns that SB 30 represents the final stage of a long trend:
exemptions → weak enforcement → erased reporting.
“You cannot protect patients by erasing evidence,” Shaver said.
“Accountability is not optional.”
Abortion Free New Mexico is calling on:
- New Mexico media outlets to review and report on AFNM’s published findings,
- editors to ask why years of documentation went unexamined,
- lawmakers to reject SB 30 and preserve transparency.
Zorro Ranch revealed what secrecy protects.
SB 30 reveals what secrecy becomes when it is written into law.
For additional background, documentation, and analysis related to SB 30, abortion reporting, and New Mexico’s long history of secrecy and shielded power, review Abortion Free New Mexico’s prior reports:
📄 Read Part One: FROM ZORRO RANCH TO ABORTION TOURISM — NEW MEXICO’S LEADERS KEEP TURNING THE STATE INTO A DESTINATION FOR SECRECY AND SHIELDED POWER
🔗 ACT NOW: SB 30 ADVANCES AS SPONSORS PIVOT TO FEAR-BASED ARGUMENTS
🔗 SB 30 Advances: Lawmakers Admit Abortion Reporting Law Is Being Ignored—Vote to Erase It Instead