Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trial by jury demanded

Parents of slain girl file wrongful death lawsuit against her boyfriend

- By Rio Lacanlale

Amelia Claypool’s boyfriend skirted a trial — and a murder conviction — in 2019 when he accepted a plea deal. Now, her parents are demanding that he face a jury in a civil case.

Last month, ahead of Claypool’s second death anniversar­y, Lee Ann Pretto and Donald Blain filed a wrongful death lawsuit in Clark County District Court.

“This action arises from a senseless, avoidable tragedy,” states the seven-page lawsuit, which, on the final page, concludes: “Plaintiffs hereby demand a trial by jury.”

A 2018 Coronado High School graduate and longtime competitiv­e cheerleade­r, Claypool was home for the summer in 2019 after completing her freshman year at University of Nevada, Reno, when she was shot and killed by her boyfriend outside a Henderson house party. She was 19.

“As a result of the wrongful death of Amelia Claypool,” the lawsuit states, “Plaintiffs Pretto and Blain have sustained the loss of love, affection, society, service, comfort, support, right of support, expectatio­ns of future support, and counseling, companions­hip, solace and mental support.”

Noah Ray Hadley, who was 18 at the time of the shooting, was sentenced six months later to up to four years in a Nevada prison, the maximum sentence for involuntar­y manslaught­er.

Had he been convicted of the original charge — murder with a deadly weapon — Hadley faced the possibilit­y of life in prison.

In April, he was granted parole, and his sentence is set to end in September, according to the state Parole and Probation Board.

Hadley called 911 shortly after 11 p.m. on June 27, 2019. Authoritie­s have said he initially reported that his girlfriend had been shot by “some random guy.”

But within hours, Henderson police had identified him as the shooter, after they had obtained a short video posted by Hadley to his Snapchat account seven minutes before he called 911. In it, Hadley was seen at the party showing off the handgun used in the shooting.

When Henderson police arrived at the scene, they found Claypool lying in the parking lot, surrounded by Hadley and the couple’s friend. Authoritie­s have said the friend hid the weapon under the driver’s seat of his 2010 Dodge pickup truck before police arrived. Officers later recovered the weapon.

The wrongful death lawsuit publicly identifies the friend for the first time as Tristan Jacobs.

At the time, citing an ongoing investigat­ion, authoritie­s declined to say whether the couple’s friend would face charges in the shooting. Court records show he was never charged in the case.

Both Hadley and Jacobs are named as defendants in the lawsuit. Efforts to reach them for comment were unsuccessf­ul.

In addition, the lawsuit names SFR Investment­s, a property management company that owns the house where the party occurred.

The lawsuit claims that the company failed to provide its house guests an environmen­t free “from unreasonab­le danger” when it allowed Hadley “to consume alcohol on the premise while in possession of a firearm.”

“Defendants negligentl­y contribute­d to the actions of Defendant Hadley,” the lawsuit continues,

“as it is reasonable to believe that consuming alcohol and being in possession of a firearm could lead to deadly consequenc­es.”

SFR Investment­s did not respond to requests for comment.

 ?? Las Vegas Review-journal file ?? Amelia Claypool’s mother, Lee Ann Pretto, hugs her daughter Olivia Claypool after the sentencing of Noah Ray Hadley on Dec. 4, 2019. Hadley took a plea deal of involuntar­y manslaught­er for fatally shooting Amelia Claypool at a Henderson house party.
Las Vegas Review-journal file Amelia Claypool’s mother, Lee Ann Pretto, hugs her daughter Olivia Claypool after the sentencing of Noah Ray Hadley on Dec. 4, 2019. Hadley took a plea deal of involuntar­y manslaught­er for fatally shooting Amelia Claypool at a Henderson house party.
 ??  ?? Donald Blain, father of Amelia Claypool, is overcome with emotion during the sentencing of Noah Ray Hadley for involuntar­y manslaught­er on Dec. 4, 2019.
Donald Blain, father of Amelia Claypool, is overcome with emotion during the sentencing of Noah Ray Hadley for involuntar­y manslaught­er on Dec. 4, 2019.
 ??  ?? Noah Ray Hadley is to be paroled on his four-year sentence for involuntar­y manslaught­er in September.
Noah Ray Hadley is to be paroled on his four-year sentence for involuntar­y manslaught­er in September.

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