The Arizona Republic

Troopers faulted in truck-bicyclists crash case in Nevada

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS – Troopers investigat­ing a crash last year that killed five bicyclists on a stretch of Nevada highway did not suspect the driver of the box truck that hit them was impaired, although a blood test later found he had a potentiall­y lethal level of methamphet­amine in his system, a Las Vegas television station reported.

KLAS-TV said it reviewed hours of trooper body-camera video, photos, internal documents and court records about the wreck that resulted in an agreement that let driver Jordan Alexander Barson plead guilty to two counts of driving under the influence causing death. He originally faced 14 felonies.

The lead prosecutor said the evidence against Barson was weakened because Nevada Highway Patrol troopers at the scene didn’t find probable cause to require a blood sample for testing. Instead, Barson submitted to a voluntary blood draw two hours after the crash. “They didn’t get a search warrant in the case, and that had to do with they didn’t suspect DUI,” former Deputy Clark County District Attorney Thomas Moskal told the station. Moskal has since left the district attorney’s office.

“Ultimately, that had negative consequenc­es down the road,” he said.

Barson, 45, is serving 16 to 40 years in state prison for the crash that killed Las Vegas residents Aksoy Ahmet, 48; Michael Murray, 57; Gerrard Nieva, 41; Erin Ray, 39; and Tom Trauger, 57.

The wreck happened the morning of Dec. 10, 2020, on U.S. 95 between Boulder City and Searchligh­t, roughly 60 miles south of Las Vegas.

About 20 bicyclists were riding into a strong headwind during an annual recreation­al ride through scenic desert in Nevada and California. Barson was working for an Arizona-based courier service. He had driven from Arizona to Las Vegas for a pickup and was on his way back to Arizona. He told investigat­ors he fell asleep at the wheel and had no memory of striking the bicyclists and an escort vehicle in the right southbound lane of the four-lane divided highway.

“I don’t have reason to believe he’s under the influence, but he’s obviously distraught,” a trooper said in one of 16 body camera videos obtained by KLASTV through a public records request.

“He thinks he fell asleep. I tend to really believe that,” another trooper said.

As troopers worked to identify the dead, they put Barson through a field sobriety test and tried to convince him to submit to a voluntary blood draw.

During the test, Barson “raised his arms, performed an improper turn” and “used his arms to balance,” a trooper wrote. The trooper later filed a report deeming the results “unsatisfac­tory.” He said Barson was “shaking uncontroll­ably” and was an “emotional wreck given the severity of the incident.”

Barson eventually submitted to a voluntary blood draw at a hospital. The results showed he had 948 nanograms per milliliter of methamphet­amine in his system, documents said. That was more than nine times the 100 nanograms per milliliter limit that prosecutor­s use in court to prove impairment.

A toxicologi­st later wrote that the amount of meth in Barson’s blood is often seen in overdose patients.

A 2013 U.S. Supreme Court ruling requires police to get a warrant before obtaining a blood draw from a driver suspected of being under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Nevada law requires law enforcemen­t to establish probable cause to take a driver’s blood. If Barson had not agreed to a voluntary draw, troopers would have had to call a judge for a telephonic warrant, a common practice.

Troopers asked Barson five times to submit to the voluntary blood draw, KLAS-TV reported. They told him he would have his license suspended, which is standard procedure, if they called a judge for a warrant. They also told him he may no longer be able to work if he couldn’t drive. On the fifth try, Barson nodded yes. Moskal said the question of whether Barson gave “free and voluntary” consent meant the evidence about methamphet­amine would never make it to a jury. Lacking probable cause, troopers released Barson. He returned home to Kingman, Arizona, where he admitted during an interview four days later that he consumed meth around 4 p.m. the day before the crash.

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