Thursday, August 29, 2024 - A US politician shook his head and looked downcast after he was found guilty of murdering a journalist who wrote critical stories about him.
Robert Telles, 47, had his eyes on the ground as he shook
his head at length while listening to a Clark County jury’s decision in the
case that sparked concerns around freedom of the press.
Las Vegas Review-Journal investigative reporter Jeff
German, 69, was discovered stabbed to death in September 2022, after writing
unflattering stories about Telles.
The stories included a report of an alleged affair that
Telles – the county public administrator at the time – had with a staff.
Telles, a Democrat, lost his re-election bid a month after
German’s stories stated that he harboured a hostile work environment and showed
favouritism.
Prosecutors said that Telles hid in bushes at German’s home
and waited for him to arrive home, then fatally stabbed him. Telles was
arrested five days later.
"In the end, this case isn’t about politics," said
Clark County Chief Deputy District Attorney Pamela Weckerly.
"It’s not about alleged inappropriate relationships.
It’s not about who’s a good boss or who’s a good supervisor or favouritism at
work. It’s just about murder."Victim
Telles’ attorney, Robert Draskovich, had stressed that cops
did not consider evidence that could suggest there were other suspects in
the crime, and that the former administrator had even joked about German’s
stories online.
"These articles were not a motive for a murder,"
Draskovich said. "And we all know, killing a journalist does not kill a
story."
Telles denied murdering German and told the court,
"Unequivocally, I am innocent."
The jury on Wednesday afternoon, August 28, found Telles
guilty of first-degree murder.
He faces life behind bars without parole, life with parole
eligibility after 20 years, or 20 to 50 years in prison.
Moments after the verdict, Katherine Jacobsen, who is the
US, Canada, and Caribbean program coordinator for the Committee to Protect
Journalists, stated that it "sends an important message that the killing
of journalists will not be tolerated".
"It is vital that the murder of journalists should be
taken seriously," said Jacobsen, “And perpetrators held accountable.”
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