Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trustee Child files to defend seat

Faces three challenger­s for School Board post

- By Ramona Giwargis and Meghin Delaney Las Vegas Review-journal

Embattled Clark County School District Trustee Kevin Child filed papers Thursday to defend his seat.

The District D trustee, who is in his first four-year term, had previously announced his intention to run for the seat in January. He joins challenger­s Irene Cepeda, Leobardo Martinez and Eli Thompson in the race so far.

Child told the Las Vegas Review-journal he is running to continue to fight corruption in the nation’s fifth-largest school district.

“We run a $2.4 billion a year operation, and we must be accountabl­e in order to serve our nearly 322,000 students and 42,000 employees,” he said in a release.

Child touted his involvemen­t in the district’s financial issues, including calls for a forensic audit, which ultimately failed to gain traction. He also touted his role in spearheadi­ng a new sexual misconduct policy in the district.

But Child has come under fire multiple times in his first term, with school district officials saying he created a hostile work environmen­t and forced staff to enact suicide protocols for students after Child had talked to students about the issue.

In October, Child was banned from school property for the second time by Superinten­dent Pat Skorkowsky, who said this time an outside agency had received a complaint about the trustee’s behavior.

Child said the allegation­s are contrived against him because he asks tough questions. He said he thinks the allegation­s are sexist because he is an easy target, as he is the only male on the Clark County School Board.

“You can make up stories all you want. There’s nothing there. They were made-up stories,” he said.

Attorney general race

Las Vegas attorney Joel Hansen, best known for defending Bunkervill­e cattle rancher Cliven Bundy, filed papers Thursday in a bid for Nevada attorney general.

“I think there are some interestin­g constituti­onal issues the attorney general ought to bring up,” said Hansen, 74.

Hansen, who chairs the ultraconse­rvative Independen­t American Party, will face off against at least four other candidates vying to replace Attorney General Adam Laxalt, who is seeking the Republican nomination for governor. The other declared candidates are Democratic Senate Leader Aaron Ford, Democrat Stuart Mackie and Republican­s Wes Duncan and Craig Mueller.

Hansen ran for attorney general in 2010, garnering a little less than 8 percent of the vote in the general election. He’s also made unsuccessf­ul bids for Clark County district attorney, the Legislatur­e and the state Supreme Court.

If he became attorney general, Hansen said, he’d file a lawsuit related to the federal government’s control of Nevada public lands — the highly charged issue that entangled his former client, Bundy.

Hansen said he’d also focus on enforcing a rule that prohibits state employees from serving in the Legislatur­e and crack down on scammers who are stealing the assets of elderly people.

He also said he would look at how Nevada can arm willing teachers to fight back against school gun violence, a plan floated by President Donald Trump.

“Criminals prefer unarmed victims, and that’s what a school is,” he said. “You’ve got teachers and students cowering under their desks and hiding in closets. I think that’s horrible. They should be able to defend themselves.”

The 2018 election filing period ends at 5 p.m. Friday.

Contact Ramona Giwargis at rgiwargis@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-380-4538. Follow @ Ramonagiwa­rgis on Twitter. Contact Meghin Delaney at 702-383-0281 or mdelaney@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Meghindela­ney on Twitter.

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Kevin Child
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Joel Hansen

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