Las Vegas Review-Journal

NLV constable seeks to nullify law

Attorneys say measure violates constituti­on

- By Michael Scott Davidson Las Vegas Review-journal

The North Las Vegas constable suing Clark County to keep his elected position is asking the county’s District Court to nullify the state law that could oust him from office.

In a new court filing, Robert Eliason’s attorneys claim that requiring certain townships’ constables to obtain a state law enforcemen­t certificat­ion violates Nevada’s constituti­on and the federal Americans with Disabiliti­es Act.

The amended complaint, filed Thursday, drops Mike Sherlock, executive director of the Nevada Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training, as a defendant but keeps the POST commission and the county.

“This is no longer about a person or organizati­on,” Eliason’s attorney Jeffrey Barr wrote in a statement. “The statute is flawed and needs to be addressed by the courts in order to prevent the kind of disruption we narrowly avoided this summer.”

In July, county commission­ers considered replacing Eliason for violating NRS 258.007, a state law enacted in 2013 that requires constables of some townships to become Post-certified in 18 months or forfeit their office. The discussion­s prompted Eliason to sue.

Eliason has spent almost three years in office without becoming certified; his attorneys say this is because of a neurologic­al condition that prevents him from completing a situps test.

Eliason’s attorneys claim only the courts, not the county commission, can declare his office vacant by forfeiture. District Judge Elissa Cadish has granted a temporary restrainin­g order keeping the constable in office.

Eliason’s amended complaint specifical­ly targets NRS 258.007, saying the law, which “prohibits the legislatur­e from passing local or special laws regulating the duties of the constables,” violates Nevada’s constituti­on because it does not apply to all townships.

Only North Las Vegas and Henderson are included because of their relatively large population­s.

The complaint also claims the law runs afoul of the federal disabiliti­es law because it excludes Eliason from holding his office because of his neurologic­al condition.

Eliason applied for an ADA workplace accommodat­ion with the county’s Office of Diversity in March.

The county’s response, sent June 30, was revealed in a new exhibit accompanyi­ng Thursday’s complaint. The county determined that although Eliason was disabled, he didn’t qualify for a workplace accommodat­ion because he didn’t receive POST certificat­ion.

Contact Michael Scott Davidson at sdavidson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3861. Follow @davidsonlv­rj on Twitter.

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