Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

District Judge Scann, 70, mourned by colleagues

- By DAVID FERRARA

Clark County District Judge Susan Scann died Saturday after a yearlong bout with pancreatic cancer, according to those who knew her. She was 70.

Scann, who earned a law degree in 1976 from California Western School of Law, was elected to the bench in 2010.

Scann concentrat­ed in real estate, commer- cial litigation, bankruptcy litigation, and creditor representa­tion, according to the Clark County District Court website. She also served as an alternate municipal court judge for the city of Las Vegas from 1980 through 2010.

Chief Judge David Barker said he received a message Saturday morning from Scann’s family about her death.

“She’s been a fixture in the legal community for years,” Barker said.

Among fellow judges, Scann was a “go-to expert” in understand­ing intricacie­s of real estate law, Barker said.

“Her door was always open,” he said. “That’s a nice thing to have when you’re a judge because so much of what we do is pretty isolated.”

She was remembered throughout the legal community for her thorough legal expertise, strong work ethic and warm smile.

Chuck Deaner, who worked with Scann for more than 30 years, said her life’s ambition was to be a judge. He called her “a close friend, more than a law partner.” She was “just a damn good lawyer and a very genuine person.”

Scann battled cancer for about 13 months, he said. “She was tough.”

District Judge Nancy Allf said she and Scann became friends 25 years ago, and while on the bench, the two trained together in business court.

“It was an honor to be her friend and an honor to serve with her,” Allf said. “She brought honor and dignity to the court every day. I’m going to miss her every day.”

Brent Larsen, who worked with Scann for 14 years at the law firm Deaner, Deaner, Scann, Malan & Larsen, called her “extremely thorough” and “very conscienti­ous of needs of the client. She’d walk through hot coals if that’s what it took to get them the justice they deserved. She was relentless.”

Scann often would work late into the evenings and on weekends to get the job done, he said. And even in the toughest of cases, Scann kept an optimistic outlook.

Scann was active in the Women’s Democratic Club of Clark County, the Southern Nevada Associatio­n of Women Attorneys and the Clark County Democratic Party.

Harold Gewerter recalled working with Scann when he was a young lawyer in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

“She was the greatest mentor there could be because she cared about people and cared about educating new lawyers,” Gewerter said. “She always had time for the young lawyers in the firm.”

Scann married Bob Scannapiec­o, a musician and teacher, in 1980. She is survived by her husband; son Brian; daughter Kathryn Scannapiec­o Colwell; son-in- law Ronald Colwell; grandson Christian Colwell; and her sisters Sharon Wehan, Mary Lou Greenwald, Melanie Fake, and Joanne Mills.

Last year, the Clark County Democracti­c Lawyers Caucus awarded Scann for outstandin­g service in law and politics, according to an Eighth Judicial District Court blog.

She also served on the State Bar Ethics Committee and on the Clark County Bar CLE Committee, and was a founding member of the Clark County Bar Pro Bono Committee. In 1995, Scann received the 1995 Profession­alism Award from the Clark County Bar Associatio­n.

Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson said Scann was a “great judge.”

Funeral plans were incomplete Saturday. Family members asked that donations, instead of flowers, be made to either St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church or the American Cancer Society.

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