Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

City, county in the dysfunctio­n sweepstake­s

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The Clark County Commission and the Las Vegas City Council have had a rivalry for years when it comes to money and power. But now they’re competing to see who touches bottom first in the descent toward dysfunctio­n and unaccounta­bility.

The Review-journal’s Arthur Kane reported last month that six commission­ers all scurried out a back door after a public meeting when he sought their comments on a variety of oversight issues involving the misconduct — and worse — of various county officials, including a constable, the former coroner and public administra­tor. In addition, the county has been less than forthcomin­g on public records requests on the subject.

Keeping the taxpayers who foot the bills in the dark is also a pastime over at City Hall, which has enough storylines to attract the interest of a reality TV producer. How does “Sin City Slugfests” sound?

Last month, Councilwom­an Victoria Seaman filed suit against fellow board member Michele Fiore, accusing her of assault during a physical confrontat­ion in 2021. Ms. Seaman also alleges that Las Vegas officials covered up the fight because they felt it could damage the city’s reputation, although proving that could be a challenge.

The altercatio­n, which took place in a private second-floor hallway at City Hall following months of bad blood between the two, involved a fair amount of grabbing, twisting and jerking, according to the legal filing, and left Ms. Seaman on the floor with a broken finger. Neither Ms. Seaman nor Ms. Fiore spoke about the incident at the time.

A month later, however, a source told the late Review-journal investigat­e reporter Jeff German about the brawl and said the city had a surveillan­ce video that caught the encounter. When Mr. German attempted to acquire a copy of the tape, city officials — who knew the footage existed — dawdled and delayed. The footage was eventually deleted.

To whitewash the incident, the city hired an outside law firm to investigat­e. Last week it delivered, pointing fingers at both Ms. Fiore and Ms. Seaman for the dust-up and exoneratin­g those who allowed the video to be overwritte­n after 60 days because there was no pending public records request at the time.

City officials knew a potential crime had been committed and that an existing video documented it. They could have predicted that legal action was likely to follow. They also knew that a reporter had requested a copy of the surveillan­ce footage, which should be available under the state’s public records law. Whether or not there was an official records request pending at a specific point in time is irrelevant. City officials allowed evidence to be destroyed, pure and simple.

The district attorney should get off the sidelines. There’s more than a few passages in the Nevada Revised Statutes about willfully tampering with evidence, particular­ly when it’s done with such cynical indifferen­ce to transparen­cy. This is also Exhibit No. 92 highlighti­ng why the Legislatur­e must impose tougher penalties on government actors who refuse to follow open records laws. “The city of Las Vegas deliberate­ly destroyed a vital public record for the sole purpose of preventing voters from seeing a violent altercatio­n between elected officials,” observed Review-journal Executive Editor Glenn Cook.

A neutral observer might be hardpresse­d to determine which local government — Clark County or the city of Las Vegas — has the edge in the dysfunctio­n sweepstake­s. But for the sake of local taxpayers, let’s hope they quickly call a truce.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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Las Vegas Review-journal file

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