The New Mexico State Police arrived at the remote cabin just after nightfall.

Dispatch radio traffic crackled as officers moved into position. Cabin 76. A search warrant had been approved. The team advanced carefully, weapons low but ready, scanning the dark tree line and the rear of the structure.

“State Police. Search warrant.”

The announcement echoed against the wooden walls. No one answered.

Again, louder.

“New Mexico State Police. We have a search warrant. Come to the door.”

Still nothing.

Officers knocked hard. Dogs barked violently from inside. The smell of fresh smoke hung in the air, unmistakable. Someone had been there moments earlier.

“If you do not answer the door, we will force entry.”

The team moved in.

Cảnh sát can thiệp khi trẻ em được nhận nuôi gặp khủng hoảng tinh thần tại các khu nhà tạm trú dành cho người vô gia cư ở New Mexico.

Inside, the house appeared abandoned, yet disturbed. Officers cleared room by room. Bedrooms were empty. Closets stood open. The barking intensified. Chains were immediately visible.

One officer paused, staring at the wall.

“Photograph that.”

Firearms were mounted overhead. A revolver was found beneath a bed. Cameras, alarms, cell phones, and electronic devices were scattered throughout the residence. Officers photographed everything before touching a single item.

Then they reached a locked room.

“What do you think this is?” one officer asked.

Another answered quietly, already knowing.

The door opened.

Inside was a small room with a bed, a toilet, restraints bolted into the walls, chains still warm to the touch. Dog kennels sat along one side of the room.

“There’s a dungeon.”

The items were documented. Chains. Paddles. Cameras. Alarms. Everything suggested prolonged confinement, not discipline.

Shortly after, officers encountered adults associated with the residence. Cell phones were seized. Data extraction began immediately. Video footage from the cameras confirmed what the room suggested.

Children had been restrained.

Not briefly. Not accidentally.

They were chained for extended periods.

During questioning, one adult attempted to minimize what had occurred, describing the restraints as “punishment” designed to avoid bruising.

Investigators interrupted.

“You personally tied him down. We saw you on video. He was crying, grabbing his ankle. That is torture.”

The room fell silent.

After hours of denial, the truth began to surface.

“She beats them,” the witness finally admitted. “She has anger issues. If they don’t do what she wants, she takes it out on them.”

Investigators later confronted another adult associated with the home. He claimed fear, manipulation, and emotional control.

“She gets in your head,” he said. “She threatened to kill herself if I left.”

Police were unconvinced.

“Why didn’t you report this?” an officer asked.

A long pause followed.

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As the investigation unfolded, officers returned repeatedly to the property, clearing the house multiple times amid concerns that someone might still be hiding inside. Animals were found throughout the home. Snakes. Cats. Kennels. Evidence of chaos layered on top of cruelty.

By the end of the operation, the house had been fully processed. Multiple devices were seized. Hours of video evidence were secured.

What began as a search warrant had exposed a system of abuse hidden behind isolation, animals, and fear.

For investigators, the priority was no longer discovery.

It was accountability.

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