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When a young college student, Michael Carmen, was shot to death during a robbery at an Albuquerque, New Mexico gas station in July 1976, Detective Greg MacAleese had no idea who was responsible for the killing.

 

No witnesses came forward and it appeared the brutal shotgun slaying would remain a mystery.

Detective MacAleese, who worked for a newspaper before joining the Albuquerque Police Department, knew something innovative would be necessary to encourage the public to get involved and help solve the murder.

He conceived the idea of producing a video reenactment of the homicide, guaranteed anonymity for anyone who was willing to call him with information and put up a reward from his own pocket to encourage someone to provide a lead that would help identify those responsible for the murder of Carmen.

It seemed almost unnecessary to take such extraordinary steps to solve the killing of Carmen. It was a case that should have outraged the community and brought forth many witnesses.

Carmen was only two weeks away from getting married and had taken an extra shift at the gas station to give a co-worker the night off. When police responded to an emergency call they found Carmen gravely wounded. He  was shot in the abdomen at point blank range with a 12-gauge shotgun.

The medical staff kept him alive for four hours. During that time he struggled to tell detectives who was responsible.

At that time, Albuquerque had one of the highest per capita crime rates in the country and people were afraid to help the police.

Detective MacAleese's plan to identify those responsible for killing Carmen worked. Within a few hours after the reenactment of the murder was broadcast on television station KOAT, he received a phone call. The video image had triggered the memory of a person who heard a loud bang in the vicinity of the crime and then saw a car driving off. The caller told MacAleese that the vehicle belonged to a resident in a nearby apartment complex.

A team of detectives subsequently arrested two men within 72 hours and charged them with the murder of Carmen and a string of armed robberies.

Albuquerque P.D.  received other calls following the reenactment, including one that helped officers solve the rape offense of a young woman. Realizing that this type of program might be useful in fighting crime, Detective MacAleese convinced his department to allow a group of citizens to establish the first Crime Stoppers program.

For his efforts, Detective MacAleese was named the country's police officer of the year. Since Albuquerque adopted the Crime Stoppers program, the city's crime rate has dropped significantly and is no longer ranked in the list of 20 cities with the highest per capita crime rate.