From KTEP:
SUNLAND PARK — The gleaming white sculpture of Jesus Christ at the top of windswept Mount Cristo Rey towers over this tiny border town and can be seen for miles in Texas, New Mexico and Chihuahua.
Every year, thousands of pilgrims hike up to the 29-foot limestone figure of Jesus with outstretched arms. The Catholic Diocese of Las Cruces owns the property and considers it a holy site.
The federal government, in an eminent domain lawsuit, wants to seize about 14 acres of land at the foot of the mountain facing Mexico and offered the Diocese
$183,071.00 for the property.
The Trump administration says it needs to secure the border by extending a nearly 30-foot-high wall in the area. The land is now at the center of a legal battle over religious freedom vs border security.
The Diocese is fighting the “heavy-handed tactics,” used by the Trump administration to take the property said attorney William Powell, senior counsel with the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown Law. “The United States government’s effort to condemn Diocesan land to build a border wall is an affront to religious liberty,” said Powell in an email statement to KTEP News.
In its response to the eminent domain lawsuit, the Diocese said taking the land is a violation of the First Amendment’s Free Exercise Clause and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
The Christ figure is a source of pride for the generations of families that have cared for the statue on the mountain.
“It’s a religious icon. It’s also a cultural icon. And it’s an artistic icon,” said Ruben Escandon with the Mount Cristo Rey Restoration Committee. The all-volunteer group relies on donations.






