Las Vegas Review-Journal

Victim’s family looks for answers

NLV man fatally shot after dropping off his daughter’s cellphone

- By Glenn Puit

Relatives of a North Las Vegas man fatally shot as he brought his 6-yearold daughter her cellphone last month want answers.

North Las Vegas police and loved ones of Jaylon Tiffith, 29, said that around 6:30 p.m. March 3 Tiffith dropped off his daughter, Nevaeh, with the child’s mother at an apartment on the 3900 block of North

Scott Robinson Boulevard. Tiffith drove off but returned a few minutes later after police said the girl’s mother had called to say that he had forgotten to leave Nevaeh’s phone.

According to a police report and Tiffith’s family, Tiffith arrived with an adult female friend. A fight between the child’s mother and the friend broke out. When Tiffith tried to intervene, police said, Jamel Gibbs, the new boyfriend of Nevaeh’s mother, shot him in the head.

“What happened within those few minutes of them turning around to bring the phone back?” said Tiffith’s niece Wynisha Lewis. “There’s more to the story. That’s how I feel.”

“It’s heartbreak­ing,” Tiffith’s sister Monika Carter said. “Devastatin­g.”

Gibbs, 29, was arrested March 31 on one count of murder, jail records show. A witness told police that they saw Gibbs with a gun at the scene.

Tiffith’s younger sister, Eliza Tiffith, and his family members said he was a loving father who regularly had custody of his daughter. The Las Vegas High School graduate worked jobs in customer service to help support Nevaeh, the family said. Jaylon Tiffith’s family also said he had custody of the child for a full month before the shooting.

“He was very harmless. Too harmless,” Eliza Tiffith said of her brother.

“I’ve never seen him fight,” Lewis added.

In contrast, court records show that Gibbs was recently released from the Nevada Department of Correction­s after serving a nearly 10-year sentence for attempted murder and battery. Gibbs was 16 when, police said, he attempted to kill four North Las Vegas teenagers in a 2008 gang shooting. Police reports indicate that Gibbs unloaded a handgun at the teens because the North Las Vegas “Squad Up and The Wood Gang” were having a dispute on Myspace, a social networking website.

Gibbs’ attorney, Craig Mueller, said “the shooting is not clear cut.”

“There was a confusing melee,” Mueller said. “It would appear that Mr. Gibbs may very well not be the shooter. We are continuing to investigat­e.”

Gibbs is being held at the Clark County Detention Center in connection with Tiffith’s killing. North Las Vegas police continue to investigat­e.

Before the shooting, Tiffith’s family said, Gibbs had threatened Tiffith over text.

“Two months before he was killed, that is when he was getting the threats,” Lewis said. “There was a message with a photo of a gun.”

 ?? Rachel Aston Las Vegas Review-journal @rookie__rae ?? Jaylon Tiffith’s niece Wynesha Lewis, second from right, and his sisters, from left, Monika Carter, Taylor Tiffith and Eliza Tiffith hold a poster and wear shirts bearing pictures of him. The 29-year-old North Las Vegas man was fatally shot last month.
Rachel Aston Las Vegas Review-journal @rookie__rae Jaylon Tiffith’s niece Wynesha Lewis, second from right, and his sisters, from left, Monika Carter, Taylor Tiffith and Eliza Tiffith hold a poster and wear shirts bearing pictures of him. The 29-year-old North Las Vegas man was fatally shot last month.
 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @rookie__rae ?? Rachel Aston
Sandra Tiffith, sister of Jaylon Tiffith, who was killed after he dropped off his daughter at the mother’s apartment, shows a button made in honor of him at Cheyenne Ridge Park. Jamel Gibbs, 29, was arrested March 31 on one count of murder.
Las Vegas Review-journal @rookie__rae Rachel Aston Sandra Tiffith, sister of Jaylon Tiffith, who was killed after he dropped off his daughter at the mother’s apartment, shows a button made in honor of him at Cheyenne Ridge Park. Jamel Gibbs, 29, was arrested March 31 on one count of murder.

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