Las Vegas Review-Journal

Candidate forsheriff seeking openness

Bedwell criticizes post-oct. 1 data flow

- By Mike Shoro and Rachel Crosby Las Vegas Review-journal

A challenger for Clark County’s top police job said he is running to bring transparen­cy and accountabi­lity after the Oct. 1 shooting.

Tim Bedwell, a retired North Las Vegas police lieutenant, praised the Metropolit­an Police Department’s response the night of the shooting but criticized the informatio­n flow in the weeks since. The department’s transparen­cy before and after the shooting influenced his decision to run for Clark County sheriff, he said.

“I also see a lot of people asking questions about Metro that they don’t seem to be able to get the answers to,” Bedwell told reporters at a Tuesday press conference announcing his candidacy.

He argued the public needed a better explanatio­n of why some investigat­ion details should remain under wraps.

“However, you can’t withhold it forever, and you need to be in front of the problem continuall­y,” Bedwell said.

Bedwell, who flirted with running for sheriff in 2013, is Sheriff Joe Lombardo’s first opponent since he announced in July that he would seek re-election.

Citing Metro’s record 171 homicides last year, Bedwell said he would work with the public to tackle violent crime. He touted community policing as a way to improve relationsh­ips with the public and combat anti-police sentiments.

“I don’t think we can police our way out of a problem like this,” Bedwell said. “I don’t think you can add enough cops to fix this.”

As sheriff, Bedwell said he would emphasize de-escalation in the use of police force, adding he wouldn’t teach a chokehold criticized after

SHERIFF

the police custody death of Tashii Brown. Metro categorize­d the laternal vascular neck restraint as an intermedia­te-to-deadly use of force in September.

He also proposed opening a police substation on the Strip where officers would work beats as they would in

neighborho­ods.

Bedwell joined the North Las

Vegas Police Department in 2001 and retired last year after working various roles in administra­tion, public informatio­n, field training and patrol. Before that, he was a deputy in Yuma, Arizona, and an officer in Gilbert, Arizona. He also spent 20 years in the Marine Corps.

Bedwell has a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice from the University of Phoenix and a master’s degree in

criminal justice, organizati­onal management from Kaplan University, according to his campaign.

A call to Lombardo’s campaign for comment wasn’t immediatel­y returned Tuesday.

Contact Mike Shoro at mshoro@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5290. Follow @mike_shoro on Twitter. Contact Rachel Crosby at rcrosby@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-8301. Follow @rachelacro­sby on Twitter.

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Tim Bedwell

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