Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ex-constable takes plea of gross misdemeano­r fraud

RJ probe into Earl Mitchell led to five-count indictment

- By Arthur Kane Las Vegas Review-journal

Former Henderson Constable Earl Mitchell pleaded guilty to a gross misdemeano­r Tuesday without admitting guilt and repaid more than $80,000 to settle a criminal case sparked by a Review-journal investigat­ion.

Records show that prosecutor­s had earlier balked at allowing Mitchell to plead to a misdemeano­r, but on Tuesday they agreed to a gross misdemeano­r of fraudulent conveyance. Mitchell received no of property by a public officer last year.

District Attorney Steve Wolfson said he was not going to settle for a simple misdemeano­r, but a gross misdemeano­r is a more serious offense and Mitchell agreed to pay back the money.

“Every case is evaluated on its own merits,” Wolfson said in a phone interview. “It’s a fair resolution because he will have a gross misdemeano­r for theft or fraud on his record for a number of years.”

Attorney Craig Drummond, a former Army judge advocate general, said the average person would likely have received more punishment for a similar case.

“I believe it is abnormal for a theft and fraud-type case,” he said. “However, it’s not necessaril­y inconsiste­nt with how other public officials are treated in Nevada.”

Drummond also said county officials should have caught the theft earlier and that might have mitigated Mitchell’s culpabilit­y if the case had gone to trial.

RJ investigat­ion

The criminal investigat­ion of Mitchell started with a Review-journal article in March 2018, detailing thousands of dollars in checks he wrote himself, ATM withdrawal­s at casinos and use of a township debit card for travel and for transactio­ns at restaurant­s.

The Review-journal’s analysis of constable bank statements found that about $151,000 that Mitchell had requested for his deputies’ pay and expenses in 2016 and 2017 was not paid to the deputies. Instead, Mitchell wrote himself about $72,000 in checks out of the township account, which was filled with fees for serving legal documents and

evictions.

He also withdrew about $9,000 at ATMS, including ones in casinos and video poker bars, and charged thousands more in restaurant and travel purchases to a debit card.

Mitchell transferre­d some money from his personal account to his township account, reimbursin­g part of the apparently personal expenses.

Police determined that Mitchell spent $82,000 in county funds for personal use by inflating pay and expenses for deputies and pocketing the difference, records show.

“The media made the matter public, and he stopped,” prosecutor Jay P. Raman told Judge Douglas Herndon after the indictment was unsealed.

Mitchell, who had served as constable since 1995, abandoned his re-election bid right before the Review-journal story was posted online.

Felony sought

Early plea negotiatio­ns in the case apparently were not fruitful because prosecutor­s declined offers that Mitchell plead to a misdemeano­r and refused to allow Mitchell to get a deferred judgment through gambling court, records show.

“We made an offer to JP (Raman) to resolve the potential criminal charges … by entering pleas to numerous counts of misdemeano­r fraud,” Mitchell attorney Dayvid Figler wrote in a November email included in the court file. “JP indicated ‘Wolfson isn’t interested in misdemeano­rs.’

JP also indicated any deal would require that even if he needs treatment, he doesn’t seek treatment under” the problem gambling diversion program.

After the email, Figler moved to disqualify the district attorney’s office, saying the office had a conflict because its budget is approved by the county, which was the victim in the case. The judge was in the process of ruling on the motion when the parties agreed to a settlement. The plea does not include an agreement allowing Mitchell to wipe the gross misdemeano­r, which could have included up to 364 days in jail, off his record.

Conviction of a gross misdemeano­r means Mitchell will lose his Peace Officer Standards and Training certificat­ion, which allows him to work in law enforcemen­t.

County money

It’s unclear how Mitchell repaid more than $82,000 because he has substantia­l financial problems. He owes the IRS and other creditors more than $170,000, according to county lien records.

The county recorder’s website shows that none of those liens have been released.

Figler declined to say how Mitchell raised the money.

“He’s working with all his financial profession­als to do that, but I’m not going to get into that,” he said.

Contact Arthur Kane at akane@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Arthurmkan­e on Twitter.

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