Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ Clark County Undersheri­ff Kevin Mcmahill is retiring from Metro.

Undersheri­ff changing jobs after 28-year span

- By Glenn Puit

I’m leaving right now at the top of my career. I’m excited, and at the same time I’m a little bit afraid. You add the Army in there and I’ve been doing policing for 33 years, so it is what I know.

Kevin Mcmahill Retiring Clark County undersheri­ff

CLARK County Undersheri­ff Kevin Mcmahill said there is a lot to be proud of as he looks back on a nearly 28-year career with the Metropolit­an Police Department.

Perhaps the accomplish­ment he’s most honored by, he said, is playing a role in improving relationsh­ips between the department and the diverse communitie­s it serves.

“To me, really the most important part of policing is knowing that we can’t do it by ourselves,” Mcmahill said Friday. “You have to have authentic relationsh­ips with partners in your community to really make meaningful change.

“I could talk to you about the things that I helped to build or lead, but when you really reflect back towards the end of a career, at this point I’m most proud of the people of our organizati­on, how resilient they are and how much empathy and compassion they have for our community.”

He served in the Army and then worked with Denver police for two years before joining Metro.

Mcmahill, 52, will retire Dec. 28 and said he will take a job in the correction­al health care sector.

“I’m leaving right now at the top of my career,” Mcmahill said. “I’m excited, and at the same time I’m a little bit afraid. You add the Army in there and I’ve been doing policing for 33 years, so it is what I know.”

Mcmahill had worked in patrol and

as a captain in Metro’s Bolden Area Command. He was previously a supervisor over narcotics investigat­ions and also worked counterter­rorism investigat­ions.

He said a lot of positives are unfolding at Metro, including the developmen­t of the Metropolit­an Police Department Reality Based Training Center, 7370 E. Carey Road, near the agency’s firearms training facility. The privately funded facility is expected to offer state-of-the-art training for all first responders in the Las Vegas Valley, including training for mass shootings.

He said the partnershi­ps developed among the community are starting to flourish. He cited Hope for Prisoners, a nonprofit that partners with law enforcemen­t agencies across the state and has helped more than 2,000 former Nevada inmates re-enter civilian life.

Mcmahill said localized community policing projects like saturation patrols targeting problem areas in the valley are helping to further those relationsh­ips.

“Las Vegas, the melting pot that it is, we’ve really been able to develop those relationsh­ips with all aspects of our community,” he said. “Is there work to be done? You bet. But I think when you compare Las Vegas to just about anywhere else, it is a great community, and that part of policing, that part of the puzzle, with relationsh­ips in the community, has been a real pride and joy for me.”

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal file @bizutesfay­e ?? Undersheri­ff Kevin Mcmahill, speaking here in December 2019, is leaving Metro to take a job in correction­al health care.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal file @bizutesfay­e Undersheri­ff Kevin Mcmahill, speaking here in December 2019, is leaving Metro to take a job in correction­al health care.

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