Nevada Code § 1.4655

Commencement of inquiry regarding alleged misconduct or incapacity of judge; time limitation for considering complaints; certain action required
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
1. The Commission may begin an inquiry
regarding the alleged misconduct or incapacity of a judge upon the receipt of a
complaint.
2. The Commission shall not consider
complaints arising from acts or omissions that occurred more than 3 years
before the date of the complaint or more than 1 year after the complainant knew
or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have known of the conduct,
whichever is earlier, except that:
(a) Where there is a continuing course of
conduct, the conduct will be deemed to have been committed at the termination
of the course of conduct;
(b) Where there is a pattern of recurring
judicial misconduct and at least one act occurs within the 3-year or 1-year
period, as applicable, the Commission may consider all prior acts or omissions
related to that pattern; and
(c) Any period in which the judge has concealed
or conspired to conceal evidence of misconduct is not included in the
computation of the time limit for the filing of a complaint pursuant to this
section.
3. Within 18 months after the receipt of a
complaint pursuant to this section, the Commission shall:
(a) Dismiss the complaint with or without a
letter of caution;
(b) Attempt to resolve the complaint informally
as required pursuant to NRS 1.4665 ;
(c) Enter into a deferred discipline agreement
pursuant to NRS 1.468 ;
(d) With the consent of the judge, impose
discipline on the judge pursuant to an agreement between the judge and the
Commission; or
(e) Authorize the filing of a formal statement of
the charges based on a finding that there is a reasonable probability that the
evidence available for introduction at a formal hearing could clearly and
convincingly establish grounds for disciplinary action.

‹ Prev All Nevada sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.