Las Vegas Review-Journal

Written rebuke following fatal DUI

Family: Minor punishment ‘adds insult to injury’

- By Arthur Kane

The Nye County Sheriff’s deputies who failed to stop an impaired driver before a triple-fatal crash were found to have violated one policy for evidence procedure after a department review — and received only a written reprimand, new records show.

A Review-journal investigat­ion in March included bodycam footage showing officers were aware Tyler Kennedy was impaired while questionin­g him about a gun complaint at a rest stop in Amargosa Valley in early 2021. An April story further revealed Kennedy telling Deputy Breanna Nelson that he had to use opioids to avoid drug withdrawal minutes before his truck keys were returned to him.

Deputies released Kennedy and he hit an SUV, killing three, an hour later.

After months of refusals to disclose the internal probe findings, the sheriff’s office released a letter Tuesday showing Nelson, Detectives Brooke Gentry and Daniel Fischer and Lt. Alan Schrimpf were reprimande­d but retained their jobs.

Chelsea Roberts, whose 12-year-old daughter, Georgia, died and son, Jackson, was injured in the crash, said officers only facing minor punishment “adds insult to injury.”

“Choosing to allow Tyler Kennedy to drive away is obviously against the law — one that has seemingly gone unpunished,” she wrote in an email exchange after reviewing the county’s letters. “It is incredibly difficult to know that my daughter would be alive had these officers done their simple duty, their job, and protected the innocent like their job entails.”

In April, Sheriff Sharon Wehrly and her staff re-

leased a letter that said the officers violated two policies — one that required them to protect people and apprehend criminals and a second about handling evidence.

But on May 3 Wehrly backtracke­d, saying the officers only violated the evidence policy.

“Although previously Nye County Sheriff’s Office staff stated that the officers were discipline­d for two policies, after further review it was determined that the officers were discipline­d for one policy,” Wehrly wrote. “I feel that the release of the above informatio­n will answer the public’s interest and will not be releasing any further informatio­n in the interest of privacy and protection from retaliatio­n for the officers involved.”

The evidence policy covers responsibi­lity for the handling, processing, safe storage and dispositio­n of all seized, found or surrendere­d property coming into the possession of the sheriff’s office. Officers found fentanyl and burnt foil in Kennedy’s truck but threw away the evidence.

Wehrly did not answer questions about officers failing to follow the department’s DUI policy that required them to prevent an intoxicate­d person from driving.

Police release impaired driver

On March 27, 2021, the four officers, along with then-deputy Michael Mokeski, were called to the Area 51 Alien Travel Center about a man with a gun but found evidence of drug use. Fischer told Schrimpf he thought Kennedy was “under the influence,” bodycam video shows.

The officers failed to conduct field sobriety tests and released him. An hour later on U.S. Highway 95, Kennedy crashed into another vehicle, killing Idaho residents Michael Durmeier,ck his fiancée, Lauren Starcevich,ck and Michael’s daughter, Georgia. Drug parapherna­lia was found near Kennedy’s truck at the crash site.

Las Vegas attorney Peter M. Angulo, who represente­d Fischer and Gentry before the disciplina­ry hearing, said the detectives had no authority or duty to conduct field sobriety tests on Kennedy.

“It wasn’t their scene,” he said. “They’re not the controllin­g officers on scene. It was a gun call and once that was cleared under department policy the first responding officer and senior responding officer are responsibl­e for the investigat­ion.”

Roberts’ attorney Greyson Goody,ck who is representi­ng her in a lawsuit against Nye County and the officers, said the county probably didn’t want to admit that the officers failed to protect the public because it will hurt their legal case. He said the sheriff’s department also seems to have trouble fulfilling its basic responsibi­lities to the public.

“They’re trying to hide things,” he said. “They don’t know what they’re doing.

It’s hard to cover up your lies with lies.”

Tennessee Highway Patrol Capt. Chris RAY,CK who is president of the National Internal Affairs Investigat­ors Associatio­n, said the county should have a neglect-of-duty policy that would cover the failure to take action during such a stop.

“The public would expect the department to have a policy on employee conduct and a review in place where leadership can determine if the policy was followed in each incident,” he said.

Deputies won’t comment

The deputies involved in the incident have not responded to repeated emails and calls seeking comment.

Brent Huntley,ck an attorney who represente­d Mokeski, said his client was a witness in the case and was not discipline­d because he left the travel center before the drugs were discovered and admissions of drug use were made. Mokeski recently joined the Nye County District Attorney’s office as an investigat­or.

Adam Levine,ck a Las Vegas attorney who represente­d Nelson and Schrimpf in the county’s internal affairs investigat­ion, said the deputies cannot comment because of Roberts’ pending legal case. He declined to discuss the discipline because of attorney-client privilege.

In Roberts’ civil case, which was moved to federal court, attorneys for the defendants have asked that most of the claims be dismissed and both sides have filed motions on that issue. After the judge resolves that issue, Goody said he expects they will be able to start discovery and deposition­s that will let them uncover further details in the case.

Goody also scoffed at Wehrly’s statement that the officers are in danger of harassment by releasing informatio­n about the internal investigat­ion.

“There’s no harassment going on,” he said. “The public knows their names, seen their faces and I would like her to cite one instance of harassment. … They’re trying to protect their own skins.”

Goody said he hopes any payments in the case will come out of the money the county received from the opioid settlement and not from taxpayers. He also said the family, as part of any settlement, will push for changes to prevent similar failures.

“The family is interested in … holding the officers accountabl­e,” he said. “There actually have to be consequenc­es for their actions.”

 ?? ?? Breanna Nelson
Breanna Nelson
 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco ?? Nye County Sheriff Sharon Wehrly with Nye County Operations Lt. David Boruchowit­z in January 2019. Wehrly oversees deputies in a controvers­ial DUI case that resulted in the death of two adults and a child.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco Nye County Sheriff Sharon Wehrly with Nye County Operations Lt. David Boruchowit­z in January 2019. Wehrly oversees deputies in a controvers­ial DUI case that resulted in the death of two adults and a child.
 ?? Rachel Aston Las Vegas Review-journal @rookie__rae ?? Tyler Kennedy, left, with his attorney, Jason Earnest, at a March 15 court hearing where he pleaded guilty to three counts of DUI causing death.
Rachel Aston Las Vegas Review-journal @rookie__rae Tyler Kennedy, left, with his attorney, Jason Earnest, at a March 15 court hearing where he pleaded guilty to three counts of DUI causing death.
 ?? Courtesy photo ?? Lauren Starcevich, from left, Michael Durmeier and Georgia Durmeier were killed in March 2021 in Nye County by impaired driver Tyler Kennedy.
Courtesy photo Lauren Starcevich, from left, Michael Durmeier and Georgia Durmeier were killed in March 2021 in Nye County by impaired driver Tyler Kennedy.

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