A legal battle along the Pecos River may appear at first glance to be a local feud between a landowner and fishermen. But the escalating fight now unraveling in New Mexico courts could determine the future of public access to rivers across the American West.
Attorney General Raúl Torrez petitioned the court to cite Erik Briones for contempt. Torrez accused him of violating a 2024 agreement tied to the landmark Adobe Whitewater Club of New Mexico v. New Mexico State Game Commission decision. The court ruling declared New Mexico streambeds public.
He alleges that Briones is interfering with river access despite an earlier agreement to stop. The state prosecutor claims he intimidated fishermen using a shotgun, used excavators to modify the river channel, and placed barbed wire in the waterway. Briones disputes the allegations.
Now the attorney general is seeking escalating fines, emergency enforcement measures, and even possible jail time. With the state’s action, the Pecos River became a test case for a much larger issue: Who truly claims exclusive control over stream flowing through private land?
Pecos River: The Legal Battle Behind the Headlines
The Pecos River dispute goes back years, fueled by increasing tensions between outdoor recreationists and wealthy landowners along some of New Mexico’s treasured river corridors.
The controversy hinged on an issue that has fractured the West for generations: Can the public legally touch or walk on riverbeds that pass through private property? In 2022, the New Mexico Supreme Court answered to the affirmative. The public, according to the Adobe Whitewater ruling, has the inherent constitutional right to use public waters for recreation.
The decision, however, did not permit the public to trespass on private land to reach rivers. But upon lawful entry to a public stream, the ruling limits the ability of landowners to block access.
Why This Matters Beyond New Mexico
The Pecos River conflict mirrors a broader collision happening across the West. When water is scarce, recreation economies and private land ownership increasingly overlap. Rivers that were not accessible by the public before are now used by fishermen, rafters and tourists.
Also, riverfront land has become more valuable, especially in scenic regions known for fly-fishing and outdoor recreation. That has increased conflicts over who controls the waterways.
Landowners fighting the Adobe Whitewater ruling argued that the decision amounted to an unconstitutional taking of private property. They claimed the state effectively stripped them of the right to exclude the public from privately owned streambeds.
But last month, the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit rejected those claims. The court said that New Mexico’s rights of access existed long before statehood and that the state high court only clarified existing law rather than creating new public easements.
Attorneys representing Briones and other interested parties say they plan to seek a rehearing.
A Fight Over Enforcement
The current conflict is paticularly important because it is no longer just about legal theory. State prosecutors are now testing how aggressively the state is willing to enforce public access rights.
The emergency motion filed by the attorney general wants the court to impose fines of up to $1,000 per day; increasing penalties for continued violations; and possible arrest for failure to remove river hazards.
The result of the dispute could define whether New Mexico’s stream-access ruling becomes a practical reality or remains difficult to enforce it on the ground. Supporters of public access frames the case as about ensuring rivers stay open to the public, not only for the wealthy to own surrounding land. Property owners, however, see it as about defending what they describe as the erosion of their rights.
And for the rest of the West, the Pecos River dispute offers a glimpse of future conflicts over water, land and the increasingly delicate balance between public resources and private control.
