Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘An ongoing concern’

County may eliminate constable offices

- Jerry E. Mosier Pahrump Bruce Feher Las Vegas

County Commission­er Chris Giunchigli­ani intends to ask her colleagues to consider eliminatin­g the two remaining local constable offices. It’s a proposal well worth pursuing.

Clark County has 10 elected constables, most of them in rural areas. The constables oversee offices that serve various legal documents, including eviction notices. Ms. Giunchigli­ani has asked county staff to investigat­e the costs and logistics of having the Metropolit­an Police Department take over the duties now carried out by the constable offices in Henderson and North Las Vegas.

The idea is not without precedent. In 2013, amid controvers­ies involving the performanc­e of Las Vegas Constable John Bonaventur­a, the commission­ers unanimousl­y voted to eliminate the position. A grand jury in 2017 indicted Mr. Bonaventur­a on theft and wiretappin­g charges related to his time in office.

In 2014, Clark County commission­ers enacted a number of reforms regarding the financial practices of the Henderson and North Las Vegas constable offices. The changes came amid concerns that there was little actual oversight of how constables used the fees they collected for performing their duties.

Yet the issues continue.

North Las Vegas Constable Robert Eliason remains in office despite having failed to pass the Peace Officer Training and Standards certificat­ion process, as required by law. In order to save his six-figure job, Mr. Eliason lobbied state lawmakers to retroactiv­ely change the statute. When that failed, he went to court. The case is currently pending.

Meanwhile, the Review-journal’s Arthur Kane reported last month that Henderson Constable Earl Mitchell wrote himself $70,000 in county funds deposited in his office’s account. He also accessed the account in casinos and video poker bars. Hours before Mr. Kane’s story was published, Mr. Mitchell announced he would not seek re-election.

“The Nevada attorney general’s office has indicated,” Mr. Kane wrote last week, “that it will start a criminal investigat­ion of Mitchell if the Clark County district attorney does not pursue the case, records show.”

Clearly, the county’s 2014 reforms didn’t work as intended. “There’s still an ongoing concern about how the money is collected and where the money is going,” Ms. Giunchigli­ani said.

Indeed, the current arrangemen­t has too often been beset by cronyism and financial laxity. The eliminatio­n of the Las Vegas constable office was accomplish­ed relatively seemlessly with little noticeable disruption. There have been few complaints or repeats of past indiscreti­ons.

The county could easily do the same in Henderson and North Las Vegas. It would be a victory for transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

The Review-journal welcomes letters to the editor. Letters should not exceed 275 words and must include the writer’s name, mailing address and phone number. Submission­s may be edited and become the property of the Review-journal.

Email letters@reviewjour­nal.com Mail Letters to the Editor

P.O. Box 70

Las Vegas, NV 89125

Fax 702-383-4676 and first-class airplane flights for himself and staff will also end — in much sooner than four years, I hope. There are other swamp people surroundin­g Donald Trump who are spending on themselves for tables, doors, security rooms, etc. That must end soon. If not, maybe Congress could open another investigat­ion that would be a great gig for someone else. show why voting for the GOP is the smart move and get people who know sales and marketing to shake things up.

Unfortunat­ely, I have every confidence that nothing will change except the Silver State turning from red to blue. Ugh.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States