Nevada Code § 3.380

Sound recording equipment: Installation; operation; transcription of recording; use of transcript; provision by party of certified court reporter; effect
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1. The judge or judges of any district
court may, with the approval of the board of county commissioners of any one or
more of the counties comprising such district, in addition to the appointment
of a court reporter as in this chapter provided, enter an order for the
installation of sound recording equipment for use in any of the instances
recited in NRS 3.320 , for the recording
of any civil and criminal proceedings, testimony, objections, rulings,
exceptions, arraignments, pleas, sentences, statements and remarks made by the
district attorney or judge, oral instructions given by the judge and any other
proceedings occurring in civil or criminal actions or proceedings, or special
proceedings whenever and wherever and to the same extent as any of such
proceedings have heretofore under existing statutes been recorded by the
official reporter or any special reporter or any reporter pro tempore appointed
by the court.
2. For the purpose of operating such sound
recording equipment, the court or judge may appoint or designate the official
reporter or a special reporter or reporter pro tempore or the county clerk or
clerk of the court or deputy clerk. The person so operating such sound
recording equipment shall subscribe to an oath that he or she will well and
truly operate the equipment so as to record all of the matters and proceedings.
3. The court may then designate the person
operating such equipment or any other competent person to listen to the recording
and to transcribe the recording into written text. The person who:
(a) Transcribes the recording shall subscribe to
an oath that he or she has truly and correctly transcribed the proceedings as
recorded.
(b) Operates the sound recording equipment as
described in subsection 2 shall:
(1) Subscribe to an oath that the sound
recording is a true and accurate recording of the proceedings; and
(2) In the event of an error, malfunction
or other problem relating to the sound recording equipment or the sound
recording, report that error, malfunction or problem to the court.
4. The transcript may be used for all
purposes for which transcripts have heretofore been received and accepted under
then existing statutes, including transcripts of testimony and transcripts of
proceedings as constituting bills of exceptions or part of the bill of
exceptions on appeals in all criminal cases and transcripts of the evidence or
proceedings as constituting the record on appeal in civil cases and including
transcripts of preliminary hearings before justices of the peace and other
committing magistrates, and are subject to correction in the same manner as
transcripts under existing statutes.
5. If a proceeding is recorded and a
transcript is requested, a copy of the sound recording must, if requested, be
provided with the transcript. The cost for providing the sound recording must
not exceed the actual cost of production and must be paid by the party who
requests the sound recording.
6. In civil and criminal cases when the
court has ordered the use of such sound recording equipment, any party to the
action, at the partys own expense, may provide a certified court reporter to
make a record of and transcribe all the matters of the proceeding. In such a
case, the record prepared by sound recording is the official record of the
proceedings, unless it fails or is incomplete because of equipment or
operational failure, in which case the record prepared by the certified court
reporter shall be deemed, for all purposes, the official record of the
proceedings.

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