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Desert procession marks death of Navajo code talker

(Morgan Lee | AP) Mourners gathered to remember deceased state Sen. John Pinto at the state Capitol in Santa Fe, N.M., on Wednesday, May 29, 2019. Pinto died on Friday at age 94 after serving 42 years in the state Senate. He trained as a Navajo code talker to encrypt radio messages in World War II and helped authorize spending this year for a museum about the code talkers.

Santa Fe, N.M. • The state Capitol echoed with tributes to the life and times of Navajo Code Talker and state legislator John Pinto on Wednesday after his casket traveled in a memorial procession across the high desert of northern New Mexico.

Hundreds of politicians, relatives and friends gathered in the Statehouse rotunda to mourn the death of the World War II Marine who served 42 years as a state Senator — a record for political longevity in that chamber.

Democratic Senate majority leader Peter Wirth said colleagues were awed by Pinto's political stamina and delighted by his good humor.

In a memorial speech, Democratic New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham praised Pinto for rallying lawmakers this year to authorize state spending on a museum about code talkers — the corps of military radiomen who helped safeguard allied secrets in World War II by encrypting radio communications using the Navajo language.

Lujan Grisham noted that Pinto's political career spanned across legislative landmarks that shored up health care for Native Americans with the creation of the Indian Area Agency on Aging and established tribal consultation standards for government decisions.

(Morgan Lee | AP file photo) In this Feb. 2, 2018, fle photo Democratic New Mexico state Sen. John Pinto talks about his career as a lawmaker on American Indian Day in the Legislature on in Santa Fe, N.M. Pinto joined the Senate in 1977 and is 92 years old. He was a Marine who trained as a Navajo code talker during World War II. His singing of the "Potato Song" is an annual Senate ritual.

"John Pinto was the love that made a difference every single day in the lives of people he touched," Lujan Grisham said.

Pinto was born in Lupton, Arizona, on the Navajo Nation to a family of sheep herders. He started formal schooling at age 12 and trained as a Marine and Code Talker as the war with Japan raged in the Pacific.

Pinto later earned a degree to become a teacher and won election in 1976 to the state Senate.

The highway memorial procession on Wednesday accompanied Pinto's casket through the communities of Shiprock, Farmington, Bloomfield, Cuba, Bernalillo and Santa Fe.

Potential successors to Pinto in the Senate will be nominated by the McKinley and San Juan county commissions. Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham makes the final appointment.

Pinto, a Democrat, this year voted in favor of progressive initiatives on gun control and abortion rights.