Las Vegas Review-Journal

STABBING

-

constituti­ng domestic violence and battery with use of a deadly weapon constituti­ng domestic violence.

“The reason we are proceeding is that she’s a danger to the community at this point,” said Chief Deputy District Attorney Jake Villani. “We understand that the parents don’t wish to prosecute the case. But this is the state of Nevada versus the defendant. And we need to protect the community.”

Kwiatkowsk­i’s attorney, Rochelle Nguyen, could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

When police arrived at the family’s home in the 1700 block of Alta Drive in December, Kwiatkowsk­i and her father, Mariusz, were covered in blood.

The defendant spent more than four months undergoing mental health evaluation­s.

In May, Las Vegas Justice of the Peace Eric Goodman pulled the deputy public defender, Tegan Machnich, from the case after he listened to the jailhouse phone calls between the defendant and her parents.

Prosecutor­s suggested that the phone calls indicated the deputy public defender convinced the victims that prosecutor­s had deceived them.

Machnich told the judge that was “absolutely not true,” according to transcript­s of a May 19 hearing. “I would never say that.”

The jail calls also revealed an emotional struggle for the parents, who are victims but do not want their daughter locked away.

“You need to go to the doctor,” Anna Kwiatkowsk­i told her daughter in one call. “You don’t need to be locked up in prison.”

Nevada law states that a preliminar­y hearing must be held within 15 days of the defendant’s initial court appearance, unless the defendant waives the deadline or there is “good cause” to extend the hearing. Prosecutor­s also can take the case to a grand jury, where defense attorneys are not allowed to question witnesses.

In Justice Court, prosecutor­s said they would not have opposed probation on a felony charge of battery with a deadly weapon for Halina Kwiatkowsk­i, as long as she received mental health treatment and took medication. If she completed probation, the charge could be reduced to a gross misdemeano­r. But that deal is no longer on the table, Villani said. The attempted murder charge carries up to 20 years in prison. Contact David Ferrara at dferrara@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-1039. Find @randompoke­r on Twitter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States