Nevada Code § 41.900

Qualifications for bringing action for wrongful conviction; required proof; weight and admissibility of evidence; appointment of counsel; innocence defined
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1. A person who is not currently
incarcerated for any offense may bring a civil action for his or her wrongful
conviction against this State in a district court seeking damages or other
relief provided by NRS 41.950 .
2. The court shall award damages for wrongful
conviction in accordance with NRS 41.950 if the person proves by a preponderance of the evidence that:
(a) He or she was convicted of a felony in this
State and was subsequently imprisoned for the conviction;
(b) He or she did not commit the felony for which
he or she was convicted and the person:
(1) Was not an accessory or accomplice to
the acts that were the basis of the conviction;
(2) Did not commit the acts that were the
basis of the conviction; and
(3) Did not aid, abet or act as an
accomplice or accessory to a person who committed the acts that were the basis
of the conviction;
(c) He or she was not convicted of an offense
necessarily included in the offense charged;
(d) Any of the following occurred:
(1) The judgment of conviction was
reversed or vacated and the charging document was dismissed;
(2) The basis for reversing or vacating
the judgment of conviction was not legal error that was unrelated to his or her
innocence, and if a court ordered a new trial, the person was found not guilty
at the new trial or the person was not retried and the charging document was
dismissed; or
(3) The person was pardoned by the State
Board of Pardons Commissioners on the grounds that he or she was innocent; and
(e) The person did not commit perjury or
fabricate evidence at the criminal proceeding that brought about his or her
felony conviction and the person did not by his or her own conduct cause or
bring about his or her felony conviction.
3. The court, in exercising its discretion
as permitted by law regarding the weight and admissibility of evidence, may, in
the interest of justice, give due consideration to:
(a) The difficulty of providing evidence caused
by the passage of time;
(b) The death or unavailability of a witness;
(c) The destruction of evidence; or
(d) Any other factor not caused by the person or
any other person acting on his or her behalf.
4. The court may appoint an attorney to
aid a person in an action brought pursuant to this section.
5. For the purposes of subsection 2, the
following do not constitute committing perjury, fabricating evidence or causing
or bringing about the conviction of the person:
(a) A confession or an admission later found to
be false; or
(b) If the judgment of conviction was reversed or
vacated and the charging document dismissed, a guilty plea for a felony.
6. As used in this section, innocence
means that a person did not engage in:
(a) The conduct for which he or she was
convicted; and
(b) Any conduct constituting a lesser included or
inchoate offense of the crime for which he or she was convicted.

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