Gallup Independent

Gallup Independent
Type newspaper
Publisher Bob Zollinger
Headquarters 500 N. 9th Street
Gallup, New Mexico
Circulation 15,284
Official website http://gallupindependent.com

Independent is a daily newspaper in Gallup, New Mexico covering local news, sports, business, jobs, and community events. The newspaper is published six days a week - Monday through Saturday. The Independent's motto is, "The Truth Well Told." The newspaper covers Gallup and the surrounding communities of McKinley County, New Mexico.[1]

The original Gallup Independent began publication under the auspice of the Independent Print Co. some time before 1923, then merged with the Carbon City News, becoming the semi-weekly Gallup Independent and Carbon City News which was published by the Gallup Printers until 1931. In 1924 the paper once again became the Gallup Independent and published weekly until 1931, when it merged with the year-old Gallup Evening Herald, published by Clyde Earl Ely, who would serve as commanding officer of the 200th Coast Artillery, and became the Gallup Independent and Evening Herald which was published by the Gallup Independent Print Co.[2] In 1936, the paper became a daily (except Sunday) paper, and reverted back to the original Gallup Independent name. The Gallup Independent was published by Gallup Independent Newspapers until 1956. In 1956 the paper took over J.M. Richards' weekly Gallup Times, which had started printing in 1954, and became the Gallup Independent and Gallup Times, which printed for just one year, until it changed its name to the Gallup Daily Independent, published by New Mexico Newspapers. In 1964 the paper once again changed its name, this time to Independent, which the paper has been known as since.[3]

The newspaper is owned by Gallup Independent, Co., which also publishes the free weekly Navajo Nation Messenger, which targets the local Navajo population in Gallup and surrounding areas.[4]

Mendoza Rape Articles

On Wednesday, June 24, 2009 Independent published an article revealing that Gallup mayor Harry Mendoza had been charged in a gang rape in 1948. Mendoza and his family said they knew nothing of the charges, and the case had never gone to court.[5]

On January 6, 2010 Independent publisher Bob Zollinger and Mendoza got into an altercation in the parking lot of a bank. Zollinger told local television station that he never threw a punch and was attacked by Mendoza, who was upset about the publication of articles linking the mayor to a gang rape 60 years ago. On July 20, 2010 Mendoza pleaded no contest for a charge of voluntarily engaging in a fight in a public place. This was a lesser charge than the original misdemeanor assault and battery charges that the mayor had faced.[6]

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