Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ex-lawmaker faces charges in campaign-fund probe

- By Colton Lochhead

CARSON CITY — A former state lawmaker who resigned in January is facing a dozen felony charges stemming from an investigat­ion into misuse of campaign funds and lying about his residency.

The Nevada attorney general’s office on Wednesday filed 12 felony charges against former Assemblyma­n Alexander Assefa, D-las Vegas, in Las Vegas Justice Court, including four counts of theft, three counts of perjury and five counts of filing falsified documents for public office. The office also levied against Assefa two charges of filing false residency statements, which are gross misdemeano­rs.

According to a complaint filed by the attorney general’s office, the former lawmaker stole thou

sands of dollars in campaign money.

Three of the felony charges he is facing are for theft of $3,500 or more, but the complaint does not say exactly how much the state is accusing Assefa of misappropr­iating.

The complaint also said Assefa filed numerous campaign finance reports with state and local elections offices that falsely reported the amount of campaign money he had received and lied about where he lived.

Assefa was first elected in 2018 to Assembly District 42 the Spring Valley area, and was re-elected in 2020. He resigned from the Legislatur­e in January amid the investigat­ion.

In October, the Review-journal reported that police were looking into Assefa and transactio­ns made between his campaign account and his personal bank account as well as accounts used by KIB Transport LLC, a company that he and his mother are listed as managing members.

Police also investigat­ed whether Assefa actually lives in the district, as required by law.

Detectives seized records, cellphones, computers, discs and a thumb drive from Assefa during a May raid.

In a resignatio­n letter sent to Gov. Steve Sisolak, Assefa admitted his “mistake,” in regards to the residency requiremen­t, though he did not outright admit to living out of the district.

“I ran to represent this District out of a sincere belief that not only was it my place of residence, but that I was in a unique position to understand and address the needs of the constituen­ts of the district, particular­ly the large Ethiopian community which resides there,” Assefa wrote.

But Assefa said that after reading the residency requiremen­t of the law, he was “mistaken.”

An initial court appearance for Assefa’s case was set for May 17.

 ??  ?? Alexander Assefa
Alexander Assefa

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