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| Photo Credit: AP. |
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A Las Vegas-area elected public official was arrested Wednesday as the suspect in the fatal stabbing of a veteran newspaper reporter whose investigations of the official’s work preceded his primary loss in June.
Clark County
Public Administrator Robert “Rob” Telles, a Democrat, was taken into custody at
his home by police SWAT officers hours after investigators served a search
warrant and confiscated vehicles in the criminal probe of the killing of Las
Vegas Review-Journal reporter Jeff German, Sheriff Joe Lombardo told the newspaper.
Telles, 45,
had been a focus of German’s reporting about turmoil including complaints of
administrative bullying, favoritism and Telles’ relationship with a subordinate
staffer in the county office that handles property of people who die without a
will or family contacts.
The
newspaper’s executive editor, Glenn Cook, said in a statement that “the arrest
of Robert Telles is at once an enormous relief and an outrage for the
Review-Journal newsroom.”
“We are
relieved Robert Telles is in custody and outraged that a colleague appears to
have been killed for reporting on an elected official,” Cook said.
Telles did
not immediately respond Wednesday to telephone messages at his county office,
and it was not immediately clear following his arrest if he had an attorney who
could speak on his behalf. The county administrator office was closed.
German
joined the Review-Journal in 2010 after more than two decades at the Las Vegas
Sun, where he was a columnist and reporter who covered courts, politics, labor,
government and organized crime.
Telles, a
lawyer who practiced probate and estate law, won his elected position in 2018,
replacing a three-term public administrator. He lost his June party primary to
Assistant Public Administrator Rita Reid. Telles’ term expires Dec. 31.
In the weeks
before the election, German bylined reports about an office “mired in turmoil
and internal dissension” between longtime employees and new hires under Telles’
leadership.
Telles
blamed “old-timers” for exaggerating the extent of his relationship with a
female staffer and falsely claiming that he mistreated them.
“All my new
employees are super-happy and everyone’s productive and doing well,” he told
the newspaper. “We’ve almost doubled the productivity in the office.”
Telles later
posted Twitter complaints about German, the Review-Journal reported, including
claims in June that German was a bully who was “obsessed” with him.
German, a
reporter with a reputation for tenacity, was working on follow-up reports, the
newspaper said Wednesday, and recently filed public records requests for emails
and text messages between Telles and three other county officials including
Reid and consultant Michael Murphy.
Murphy, the
former Clark County coroner hired to address complaints about leadership in the
public administrators’ office, did not immediately respond to a telephone
message.
German’s
body was found Saturday morning outside his home. Police said he apparently was
killed Friday and characterized the attack as an isolated incident. The Clark
County coroner ruled that German died of “multiple sharp force injuries” and
ruled the case a homicide.
After police
asked Monday for public help to identify a suspect, developments came quickly.
Police on Tuesday
showed a brief video of a possible suspect walking on a sidewalk clad in bright
orange “construction attire” and distributed a photo of a distinctive red or
maroon GMC Yukon Denali SUV with chrome handles, a sunroof and a luggage rack,
saying it may have been linked to the case.
Telles was
seen in newspaper photos washing a similar vehicle parked in his driveway on
Tuesday, and KTNV-TV reported the vehicle was towed away after police arrived
on Wednesday.
