Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevada high court reverses ruling on lawyer

- By David Ferrara Las Vegas Review-journal

The Nevada Supreme Court on Thursday reversed the dismissal of a 14-count indictment against a Las Vegas defense attorney.

Prosecutor­s have said that Alexis Plunkett improperly provided a cellphone to inmates at the Clark County Detention Center. Plunkett has said she is in a relationsh­ip with one of the inmates, 27-year-old Andrew Arevalo, who also was indicted, and that she used the cellphone to make calls regarding bail, which she believed she was authorized to do.

The high court ruled unanimousl­y that District Judge Michael Villani was wrong to throw out the charges against Plunkett more than a year ago.

“Even though Plunkett is not a prisoner confined in a jail, she can be criminally liable as a principal for a prisoner’s possession of a cellphone,” Justice Lidia Stiglich wrote.

On her law firm’s Facebook page on Thursday, Plunkett posted a link to this story and wrote: “I’m extremely disappoint­ed but won’t give up.”

Prosecutor­s declined to comment on the court’s ruling but said the case against Plunkett could return to the lower court within weeks.

The high court focused on Plunkett’s alleged actions as aiding and abetting the crimes of inmates.

“If Plunkett had furnished a cellphone to a prisoner confined in a prison, thereby also aiding in the prisoner’s possession of the cellphone, charges may have been brought … based on an aider and abettor theory of liability,” Stiglich wrote. “Simply because a defendant’s actions might subject them to liability under more than one statute does not evince

PLUNKETT

legislativ­e intent to limit the broad applicatio­n of our aiding and abetting statute.”

Arevalo had been freed from the jail, and in February he graduated from Hope for Prisoners, a nonprofit organizati­on that partners with law enforcemen­t agencies across the

state to give current and former inmates a chance to return as productive members of society.

But he was back behind bars in September after prosecutor­s said he did not charge a house arrest ankle monitor and tested positive for methamphet­amine. He is being held without bail and is awaiting trial on charges related to cellphone possession.

Plunkett represente­d Arevalo in his

lawsuit against the Nevada Department of Correction­s and others, including the former director of prisons, after he was shot in the face by a correction­al officer in 2014 at Nevada’s High Desert State Prison in a shooting that left another man dead.

Contact David Ferrara at dferrara@reviewjour­nal.com or 702380-1039. Follow @randompoke­r on Twitter.

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Alexis Plunkett

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