Las Vegas Review-Journal

Oct. 1 file release ordered

Judge accuses Metro of ‘gamesmansh­ip,’ delays

- By Rachel Crosby Las Vegas Review-journal

A judge accused the Metropolit­an Police Department of gamesmansh­ip Tuesday before denying another agency request to delay the release of 911 calls and body camera footage from the Route 91 Harvest festival massacre.

“I’m very frustrated, because I think that gamesmansh­ip is going on here,” District Judge Stefany Miley said in the contentiou­s hearing. “It’s now months since the shooting occurred, and it’s still the same: delay, delay, delay. If one technique doesn’t work, then you switch to another one. That’s very concerning for the court.”

In March, District Judge Richard Scotti ruled that Metro was obligated to begin handing over recordings from the Oct. 1 shooting immediatel­y to the Las Vegas Review-journal and other media organizati­ons suing for their release.

Scotti said the records could be made public gradually as they’re processed — as opposed to releasing them all at once after additional delay — and gave Metro six months to complete the task. He also ruled that the department could not charge journalist­s hundreds of thousands of dollars for the production of those records.

Metro then had two options, Miley said Tuesday. The department could have asked Scotti to reconsider, or it could have filed an appeal with the Nevada Supreme Court.

The department decided to pursue the former option but asked for a new judge.

METRO

The case was transferre­d to Miley’s courtroom.

On Tuesday, Metro’s attorneys asked to withdraw their motion for reconsider­ation and instead move forward with an appeal to the Supreme Court.

“All you’ve done is prolong the proceeding­s even further than it should have been, and that’s what’s very concerning to me,” Miley said. “It seems like a game.”

Metro lawyer Jackie Nichols then responded, “And I respect Your Honor, but I would disagree.”

Miley ultimately denied Metro’s motion for reconsider­ation, despite the request to withdraw it. The judge also denied Metro’s subsequent request to keep the body camera footage and 911 calls in limbo until police can seek relief from the state’s high court.

The decision means Metro is again obligated to begin producing the records immediatel­y, unless the high court grants an emergency stay — or delay — while the appeal is pending.

“Additional appeals would be an additional waste of taxpayer resources,” Review-journal Executive Editor Glenn Cook said Tuesday. “The department should begin releasing the records at once.”

Miley said two factors weighed heavily on her decision: Metro’s stalling and its failure to cite specific laws that make the recordings confidenti­al.

“Although the court does agree with Metro in that there are privileges that may protect the disclosure of certain documents, the question has always been, for this court: Which documents are subject to protection­s under the law? And that’s never been provided to this court,” the judge said.

Earlier this year, Oct. 1 autopsy records, as well as FBI and Metro search warrant records, were released after the Review-journal and other media organizati­ons filed separate lawsuits. A gunman killed 58 concertgoe­rs the night of the shooting before fatally shooting himself.

Contact Rachel Crosby at rcrosby@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3801. Follow @rachelacro­sby.

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Former U.S. Senate candidate Roy Moore is countersui­ng a woman who said he sexually touched her when she was 14 and he was 32.

Attorneys for Moore filed the defamation countercla­im this week against Leigh Corfman — who has an ongoing defamation lawsuit against Moore — denying the accusation­s of misconduct raised by Corfman in an interview with The Washington Post.

Corfman is among several women who say Moore romantical­ly or sexually pursued them decades ago when they were in their teens and he was in his 30s.

“Leigh Corfman knowingly, willingly and maliciousl­y made statements she knew to be false to The Washington Post with the intention and knowledge that such statements would damage the reputation of Mr. Moore,” attorneys for Moore wrote.

The accusation­s of sexual misconduct became an issue in the 2017 race in Alabama to replace Attorney General Jeff Sessions in the U.S. Senate. Moore lost to Democrat Doug Jones.

In the court filing, Moore’s attorneys blamed the election loss on the misconduct accusation­s.

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