Las Vegas Review-Journal

Judge candidates file complaints over ads

Flyers, online posts brought before board

- By David Ferrara Las Vegas Review-journal

A pair of attorneys vying for judgeships in Clark County filed two separate complaints with the state’s judicial review board against seven candidates in the upcoming primary election.

But the targets of the complaints questioned the motives of the candidates behind them as the deadline for mail-in ballots approaches.

In a five-way race for one of the open seats in District Court, attorney Michael Bohn filed a complaint with the Nevada Commission on Judicial Discipline, saying that attorney Dan Gilliam had violated the rules of nonpartisa­n judicial races.

A campaign flyer under the banner of the Nevada Republican Club listed seven candidates endorsed by the group, including Gilliam. It was paid for by the campaigns of each of the candidates, which also included incumbents Joe Hardy Jr., Ron Israel and William Voy, along with attorneys Adam Ganz, Jacob Reynolds and Margaret Pickard.

Bohn and Gilliam are vying for a seat in Department 24 against attorneys Joe Vadala, Dena Rinetti and Erika Ballou.

While Bohn said that the flyers being delivered around the same time as mail-in ballots was “egregious,” Gilliam said the Nevada Republican Club was not an arm of the GOP and that a group mailer was allowed under the state’s judicial campaign rules. The group’s website says that it “has been bringing conservati­ves together in Las Vegas since 1981 to showcase Republican principles and American exceptiona­lism.”

Gilliam said that Bohn’s complaint, filed late last week, has no teeth.

“I could write a million complaints about a million people,” Gilliam said. “That doesn’t mean anything. It’s dishearten­ing the direction he’s going.”

The Nevada Code of Judicial Conduct says that candidates may not

“seek, accept, or use endorsemen­ts or publicly stated support from a political organizati­on.”

In a separate complaint, filed the same day as Bohn’s, Family Court candidate Jack Fleeman attacked online videos and photos posted by one of his opponents, Margaret Pickard, in a race for a newly created seat.

In a video posted on her campaign’s Facebook page, Pickard is seated on the bench of a courtroom, wearing a black top, which Fleeman suggested could be confused for a robe. Pickard serves as a Family Court hearing master, an appointed position.

“Even if Mrs. Pickard’s outfit is not technicall­y a judicial robe, her appearance in an all black outfit resembling a robe, sitting on the bench with the State Seal behind her while she hears a court case, is a violation of the ethics rules because it sends a powerful, misleading message to the public that Mrs. Pickard is an elected, incumbent judge — when she is not,” Fleeman wrote in a complaint to the commission.

Pickard and Fleeman are vying for the seat in the June 9 primary along with attorney Craig Bourke.

In another video posted this month, Pickard is seen walking through a courtroom and holding up a blue robe at the bench.

“Interestin­gly, because I’m a hearing master I’m not allowed to wear it for advertisem­ents,” she said.

In a later email to the Review-journal, Pickard pointed out that the state’s judicial campaign ethics allow “the use of a courtroom for purposes of filming campaign commercial­s as long as the use does not interfere with the performanc­e of judicial duties.”

Fleeman said his campaign was “significan­tly harmed” by Pickard’s Facebook posts.

Contact David Ferrara at dferrara@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-1039. Follow @randompoke­r on Twitter.

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