Hidalgo County (Lordsburg) court docket Feb. 1-7 lists domestic-violence, juvenile matters
The Hidalgo County (Lordsburg) magistrate docket lists domestic-violence and juvenile matters for Feb. 1-7, 2026, a reminder that local court activity may affect safety, schedules, and public records access.

The Sixth Judicial District’s online docket for Hidalgo County (Lordsburg) lists court hearings scheduled for the week of Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026 through Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026, and flags domestic-violence and juvenile-related items among the public entries. The listing, posted on the Hidalgo County Magistrate Court Docket – Lordsburg, NM page, covers a rolling seven-day window and is the public notice residents should consult for upcoming magistrate hearings.
Public-facing language on the Sixth Judicial District page makes the site’s scope clear: “Court hearings scheduled for the current day plus six days in the future are available.” The district also instructs residents who need more detail to reach out for help: “If you are unable to find a hearing or need additional information pertaining to a hearing, please contact the Court.” The online docket carries a formal caveat as well: “Disclaimer: The hearing details may contain omissions and the Court makes no warranty regarding this information.”
The excerpt available to this news outlet includes the line “Items on the public docket include domestic-violence matters, juvenile p” but the phrase ends abruptly in the source and is presented here verbatim with that truncation. The public posting does not, in the material reviewed, provide case names, case numbers, specific charges, hearing times, judge assignments, or courtroom locations for individual entries. That lack of granular detail means members of the public looking for particulars on a case should verify with the clerk’s office before relying on the online summary.
For Hidalgo County residents, docket activity matters in several ways. Domestic-violence hearings can involve protective orders, temporary custody questions, or criminal arraignments that affect alleged victims and local safety. Juvenile matters raise heightened confidentiality and legal limits on what the courts can publish, so families and community organizations should expect some records to be sealed or redacted under New Mexico law. Because the district page itself warns that details “may contain omissions,” reporters, attorneys, and community members should confirm specifics through the court clerk if they plan to attend hearings or cite case information publicly.

The judicial branch context is noted on the page as well: “The judicial branch of New Mexico consists of the Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, 34 districts courts and 46 magistrate courts in 13 judicial districts, the Bernalillo County Metropolitan Court, 33 county probate courts, and 78 municipal courts serving the people of the state.” That structure governs where Hidalgo County matters are filed and how public access to dockets is managed.
What comes next for readers is straightforward: consult the Hidalgo County Magistrate Court docket for updates and, if necessary, contact the court directly for full records or clarification. Given the potential public-safety implications of domestic-violence cases and the legal protections surrounding juvenile files, verifying the court’s complete records will provide the most accurate picture of what is scheduled and what is public.
Sources:
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip

