Las Vegas Review-Journal

Prosecutor­s: $1M bail for Orozco

Judge to decide whether landlord, co-defendant should be jailed

- By David Ferrara Las Vegas Review-journal

Prosecutor­s want Adolfo Orozco, the landlord of a downtown Las Vegas apartment building where six people died in a fire in December, held on $1 million bail.

In court Monday, Chief Deputy District Attorney John Giordani asked a judge to order Orozco, who faces involuntar­y manslaught­er charges, to surrender his passport, citing “substantia­l ties” to other states and Mexico.

Las Vegas Justice of the Peace Ann Zimmerman said she would make a decision Tuesday on whether Orozco and his co-defendant, Malinda Mier, should be jailed.

Orozco, 44, said he owns homes in Napa, California, and Las Vegas, where he has lived since 2013. He said he rented out seven houses and two four-unit apartment buildings.

“I’m worried that his tenants aren’t safe with the way he manages his properties,” Zimmerman said. “His tenants need to be safe.”

Along with one count of manslaught­er for each of the six victims, Orozco and Mier also face 15 counts of performanc­e of an act or neglect of duty in disregard of safety resulting in substantia­l bodily harm or death. Orozco also faces four counts of preventing or dissuading witness or victim from reporting a crime or commencing prosecutio­n with the use of a deadly weapon. All charges are felonies.

Orozco’s lawyer, Paola Armeni, told the judge that Orozco, who is married with three children, has kept in contact with prosecutor­s since the December fire and asked for him to remain free on his own recognizan­ce.

Armeni suggested that the former live-in manager of the Alpine Motel Apartments, Jason Casteel, was culpable for the deaths.

“He should probably be standing on this side of the table,” Armeni said.

Prosecutor­s have said that once an investigat­ion into the Dec. 21 fire began, Orozco threatened the apartment’s manager and his fiancee and tried to persuade them not to talk to detectives “by brandishin­g a modified AK-47 style assault rifle and offering money” for them to leave town.

While Mier, 40, did not have an ownership stake in the Alpine apartments, she ran a property management company for Orozco, according to her lawyer, Kristina Wildeveld.

“She cares deeply about the people who lived at the Alpine Motel, as she does about the people who live at all the properties Mr. Orozco owns,” Wildeveld said.

Mier delivered a “sworn statement under oath” in an email to reporters last week. In it, she accepted responsibi­lity for not performing daily inspection­s of the property before the fire, while saying that the fire department and alarm company should also be held liable.

“I, Malinda Mier, am taking full responsibi­lity for the management negligence leading up to and the date of the ALPINE MOTEL FIRE,”

the statement read. “Unfortunat­ely, other people and factors may have contribute­d to this tragedy, but at the end of the day leaders admit accountabi­lity and responsibi­lity. I TAKE full ownership for the EVENTS AND Alleged Negligence. … I, Malinda Mier, am saying once again I accept full ownership and 100% responsibi­lity for any management errors I may have made within the time span leading up to and the day of THE ALPINE MOTEL TRAGIC FIRE! Where I come from accepting responsibi­lity earns you respect.”

An investigat­ion into the deadly fire, which also left 13 injured and dozens displaced, found more than 40 potential fire code violations, including a rear exit door that had been bolted shut.

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

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 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e ?? Adolfo Orozco, owner of the Alpine Apartments who is charged with six counts of involuntar­y manslaught­er, leaves the courtroom after a hearing at the Regional Justice Center on Monday.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e Adolfo Orozco, owner of the Alpine Apartments who is charged with six counts of involuntar­y manslaught­er, leaves the courtroom after a hearing at the Regional Justice Center on Monday.

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