Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

County officials are studying land use options for the area around Allegiant Stadium.

Nurse, wife on way to Calif. church at time

- By Glenn Puit

Nimfa Escobia was in the passenger seat of the family’s 2013 Toyota Pathfinder as her husband, Marcial, pulled out of the driveway of their Las Vegas home and set off for Sunday services at a church in California.

As was her habit when traveling, Nimfa was clutching her rosary and praying for safe travels when her world exploded.

The next thing she remembers is being surrounded by people.

“I just woke up,” she said. “A lot of people … telling me, ‘Keep talking.’ And I realized, ‘Oh, my God, we are in an accident!’ So I touch him, wake up, wake up! And he didn’t move.”

Marcial Escobia, 65, died the morning of Oct. 27. Police say a drunken driver ran a red light at Tropicana Avenue and Rainbow Boulevard in Las Vegas and slammed into the Escobias and five other vehicles at high speed.

Marcial Escobia’s family said the crash took the life of a deeply religious man who lived to give to others.

As a surgeon in his native Philippine­s, he worked long days at a hospital and then would open his home after hours to care for those who couldn’t afford treatment.

He came to the United States in 1994 on a work visa and built a successful life for his family working as a registered nurse in the Las Vegas Valley. His family said he was a nurse because his goal was to help others.

‘He loved God’

“He loved God, and he wanted to instill that belief in us since we were very small,” Escobia’s daughter, Misha Escobia, said.

Going to church was important to Escobia and his wife. On the morning of the crash, they were on their usual hourlong Sunday journey to St. Therese Mission in Tecopa, California.

“He served there, and it was more like a restoratio­n,” his son, Nimar Escobia, 35, said. “Very nice. Looks like the land of Jesus. So he’s been traveling the miles to serve others.”

Nimfa Escobia said that on the morning of the crash, she offered to drive, but her husband said he would do it.

“He said, ‘I’m OK,’ so I told him, ‘Concentrat­e on your driving and I’ll

be praying,’” Nimfa Escobia said.

Clark County District Attorney Steven Wolfson said the person accused of causing the crash, 35-year-old Kevin Raspperry, of Henderson, is a repeat drunken driver with two DUI conviction­s. Authoritie­s allege that at the time of the crash Raspperry had a blood-alcohol content of 0.20 percent, nearly two-and-a-half times the legal limit. They also contend that Raspperry had methamphet­amine, ecstasy and marijuana in his system.

Wolfson said Raspperry was driving 85 mph on Tropicana when he struck the Escobias’ vehicle.

“Five fractured ribs, my left side is hurting,” Nimfa Escobia said this week. “I can hardly walk. It’s hurting.”

“I don’t know why he killed my husband,” she added. “He took the most important person in my life.”

On Wednesday, Wolfson’s office authorized the filing of a second-degree murder charge against Raspperry. Wolfson said the recklessne­ss of the motorist’s actions warrant the charge.

Defense attorneys say charging a drunken driving suspect with murder will not hold up in court, because an existing statute dictates that the applicable charge is driving under the influence resulting in death. Raspperry’s attorney, Craig Mueller, said he believes the murder charge will eventually be dismissed.

Seeking justice — and safety

The Escobia family is grief-stricken. They said they are struggling to get through every single day, and they want something good to come from their devastatin­g loss.

They hope valley residents will do everything possible to combat driving under the influence.

“Taxi. Uber. Sober friends,” said Jordan Basa-Franco, 36, the husband of Misha Escobia. “It is so easy to pick up a phone. Or if a bartender sees someone intoxicate­d, get them a ride. Just don’t let them go.”

Misha Escobia said the community needs to come together to stop drunken driving.

“As a community, we need to stand up against this,” she said. “It is out of control.”

Marcial Escobia’s son agreed. “My dad spent 80 percent of his life serving others,” Nimar Escobia said. “The guy who (killed) our dad, it is time for him to get the right service from our justice system.”

 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco ?? Nimfa Escobia and her husband were driving to church when another driver plowed into their vehicle, killing Marcial Escobia.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-Journal @Erik_Verduzco Nimfa Escobia and her husband were driving to church when another driver plowed into their vehicle, killing Marcial Escobia.
 ?? Escobia family ?? Marcial Escobia with his wife, Nimfa. Marcial Escobia was killed in an October crash that authoritie­s say was caused by a drunken driver.
Escobia family Marcial Escobia with his wife, Nimfa. Marcial Escobia was killed in an October crash that authoritie­s say was caused by a drunken driver.
 ?? Escobia family ?? Marcial Escobia, center, became a nurse after emigrating from the Philippine­s.
Escobia family Marcial Escobia, center, became a nurse after emigrating from the Philippine­s.
 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? Kevin Raspperry, 35, of Henderson, has been charged with second-degree murder in the fatal Oct. 27 crash.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-Journal Kevin Raspperry, 35, of Henderson, has been charged with second-degree murder in the fatal Oct. 27 crash.

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