Las Vegas Review-Journal

Jailed pimp died of heatstroke

Coroner: Fatal episode at Indian Springs was environmen­tal

- By Rachel Crosby Las Vegas Review-journal

The convicted pimp who was found unresponsi­ve in his prison cell in May died of an environmen­tal heatstroke, the Clark County coroner’s office ruled Monday.

Robert Sharpe III, 31, died May 20 at Valley Hospital Medical Center in Las Vegas after being found unresponsi­ve in his cell at High Desert State Prison in Indian Springs two days earlier, the Nevada Correction­s Department had announced May 23.

When reached by phone after hours Monday about Sharpe’s cause of death, which the coroner’s office confirmed late Monday afternoon, Correction­s Department spokeswoma­n Brooke Keast said, “That’s interestin­g,” then declined further comment, citing lack of informatio­n.

The day Sharpe was found unresponsi­ve in his cell, the National Weather Service recorded a high temperatur­e of 74 degrees in Indian Springs with a low of 52 degrees, meteorolog­ist Chris Outler said Monday.

As of late Monday, it remained unknown how hot it was inside the prison — or how hot it was inside Sharpe’s cell — the day Sharpe was found unresponsi­ve. It was also unclear whether Sharpe was alone in his cell or whether any other inmates that day experience­d heat-related medical issues.

Las Vegas Fire Department spokesman Tim Szymanski said heat-related deaths often involve a myriad of variables, including pre-existing medical conditions and an individual’s hydration levels.

“Heat affects different people in different ways,” Szymanski said. “You don’t have to have 100-degree heat to die of heat-related conditions.”

The county coroner’s office did not cite any pre-existing medical conditions as contributi­ng factors in Sharpe’s death, which was ruled an accident.

Last year, Sharpe was sentenced to life without parole for kidnapping and forcing a teenager into prostituti­on, among other felonies. A phone call to Sharpe’s defense attorney, Arnold Weinstock, was not returned late Monday.

In November 2014, the Nevada Correction­s Department announced that High Desert inmate Carlos Manuel Perez Jr., 28, had died, with no mention of cause of death, citing an “ongoing investigat­ion.”

It wasn’t until March 2015 that the public learned that Perez, who had been at High Desert serving an 18to-48-month sentence for battery since March 2014, had been shot multiple times in the head, neck and arms in what the Clark County coroner’s office ruled a homicide.

Perez was handcuffed at the time of his death. In connection, Raynaldo Ramos, 37, a former correction­al officer trainee at High Desert, was charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er and performanc­e of an act in reckless disregard of persons or property resulting in death.

A jury trial for Ramos is scheduled for Feb. 5, 2018, court records show.

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