Police execute search warrants at Henderson constable’s office, home
Updated June 5, 2018 - 5:40 pm
Police searched Henderson Constable Earl Mitchell’s home and office Tuesday as part of a criminal investigation into his questionable spending first uncovered by the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Mitchell’s attorney Damian Sheets confirmed the search of Mitchell’s office Tuesday morning but said Mitchell is innocent of any wrongdoing.
“I find it disturbing that the media is aware of a search warrant an hour after police executed it,” Sheets said. “Somebody’s trying to litigate this case in the public forum.”
A source confirmed Metropolitan Police Department teams simultaneously served warrants at the constable’s office and his Henderson home Tuesday morning, and two sources said officers spent about four hours at the office seizing computers and paper records.
Sheets declined to confirm police searched Mitchell’s home or discusswhat they were looking to seize.
In March, a Review-Journal story detailed that Mitchell wrote himself more than $70,000 in checks over the past two years from an account containing county money for his deputies’ wages, records show.
Mitchell also withdrew about $9,000 in cash from township accounts. Several withdrawals were made from ATMs at casinos or video-poker bars, bank statements show. He also used a debit card for one of the accounts to pay bar tabs, eat at restaurants and take trips to locations where his children live, records show.
In response to the story, Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt asked Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson if local law enforcement was investigating the case. In a reply letter, Wolfson confirmed authorities had opened an investigation.
Criminal defense attorney Craig Drummond said the search warrants show law enforcement is taking the questionable spending seriously.
“These investigations can take months. They can take years, but my hunch is they will move quicker to make sure funds are not removed,” he said.
Craig Mueller, a defense attorney who served as deputy district attorney and now is running for attorney general, said the warrants are significant because it shows that police presented sufficient information to a judge to obtain the warrants.
“They got a third-party, impartial magistrate to make a reasonable inference that there’s been a crime,” he said, adding there is no way to know how long the case would take.
But Sheets said Mitchell is cooperating with a county audit that will clear him.
“My client has maintained his innocence,” he said. “But he has been targeted by some individual or organization with a personal agenda.”
Metro and the district attorney’s office did not respond to requests for comment.
Contact Arthur Kane at akane@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0286. Contact Jeff German at jgerman@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4564. Follow @JGermanRJ and @ArthurMKane on Twitter.
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