Las Vegas Review-Journal

Felon alleging court corruption gets venue change

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

A judge outside Las Vegas will decide whether a felon who alleged widespread corruption within Clark County’s justice system should receive a new trial, according to court records published Tuesday.

Although the Nevada Supreme Court denied Marlon Brown’s challenge of his decadeslon­g prison sentence, his attorney continued to pursue efforts to remove District Judge Michelle Leavitt and void her orders in the case.

Leavitt could be a witness in Brown’s post-conviction hearings, according to a change-of-venue order from District Court Chief Judge Linda Bell intended “to avoid the appearance of impropriet­y.” Bell cited the Nevada Code of Judicial Conduct and a decision from the Supreme Court Chief Justice James Hardesty.

Lawyer Michael Mcavoyamay­a said he considered Tuesday’s order a partial victory for Brown.

“I think the reassignme­nt to a new venue is an indication that our claims have merit, and he should get a new trial,” he said.

Through her lawyers, Leavitt has dismissed Brown’s accusation­s as “blatantly false and defamatory.”

Brown, 38, has alleged that the judge’s daughter had ties to a business Brown owned, which resulted in “a shocking willingnes­s to engage in fraud and deceit to cover her tracks,” which Leavitt has denied.

In recent years, the judge oversaw Brown’s trial on battery and kidnapping charges for shooting his ex-girlfriend in the leg, ordered him to serve up to 45 years behind bars, sealed parts of his records and intervened in his appeal.

Brown owned a now-closed clothing store that another judge, Las Vegas Justice of the Peace Melanie Tobiasson, has said was a front for an unlicensed club where teens drank, used drugs and engaged in prostituti­on.

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