Las Vegas Police and Judges Collide Over Defendant House Arrest Releases

By Matthias Binder
In dispute over electronic monitoring releases, are police flouting court orders? (Featured Image)

High-Profile Rejections Spark Outrage (Image Credits: Pexels)

Las Vegas – Tensions between the Metropolitan Police Department and local judges have escalated as court orders for pretrial electronic monitoring releases meet firm pushback from law enforcement.

High-Profile Rejections Spark Outrage

A series of recent cases highlighted the friction when judges mandated releases onto the police-run electronic monitoring program, only to see defendants remain behind bars. In one instance, Joshua Sanchez-Lopez, a 36-year-old with 35 prior arrests including a conviction for involuntary manslaughter, faced charges of grand larceny of a motor vehicle. Justice of the Peace Eric Goodman set $25,000 bail on January 13, 2026, and ordered high-level monitoring if posted.[1][2]

Sanchez-Lopez posted bond on January 24 but stayed detained. Goodman issued further release orders on February 5 and 9, threatening contempt sanctions against the department. Metro declined, citing past violations like fleeing police while armed in 2020 and selling drugs from home. The judge ultimately shifted him to a court pretrial unit with separate GPS tracking.[1]

Similar standoffs occurred with Matthew Cordero-Davila, accused in a domestic violence coercion case, and Jaeion Severin, charged with shooting at an officer. District Judge Erika Mendoza adjusted Cordero-Davila’s medium-level order to high-level after rejection, while North Las Vegas Justice of the Peace Belinda Harris kept Severin jailed despite his posted bail.[1]

Metro Police Invoke State Law Protections

The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department maintains that state statutes grant Sheriff Kevin McMahill sole discretion to reject monitoring if it presents an unreasonable risk to public safety or officers. Assistant General Counsel Michael Dickerson argued during a March 12 hearing that courts cannot compel the sheriff to break the law.[1]

Metro emphasized the program’s scale – about 450 participants at any time – with roughly 14 rejections this year, many for medium-level only. Dickerson noted, “You cannot hold somebody in contempt for following the law.”[1] The department views its role as complementary to courts, not subordinate, and sends rejection notices for judicial review.

  • High-level monitoring confines participants to home except for essentials like work or school.
  • Medium-level allows broader movement.
  • Rejections often stem from criminal history, prior program failures, or proximity risks like no-contact orders.

Courts Decry Overreach and Rights Violations

Judges and public defenders countered that Metro’s vetoes usurp judicial authority after thorough risk assessments. Clark County Public Defender David Westbrook called it a dangerous executive override of discretion, stating, “It is not the place of a Metro officer sitting alone at a desk to overrule the judge.”[1]

Las Vegas Justice Court Chief Judge Melisa De La Garza raised separation of powers and due process alarms, noting delayed rejection letters leave defendants without swift recourse. Goodman quipped in court, “Call me crazy, but I’m the judge… I would like to think that my orders are actual orders.”[1] Defense attorney Dowon Kang warned of broader implications for the justice system.

Supreme Court Petitions Signal Escalation

The rift reached the Nevada Supreme Court through dueling filings. Metro petitioned on March 9, 2026, for a writ of prohibition against Las Vegas Justice Court, arguing forced compliance violates statutes like NRS 211.250(2).[2] Public defenders sought contempt rulings, framing it as unconstitutional detention.

Side Main Argument
Police Statutory duty to protect public safety overrides orders.
Courts Judicial discretion cannot be second-guessed without due process.

Key Takeaways

  • Dispute hinges on interpreting state law amid rising pretrial releases.
  • Multiple cases this year test program limits.
  • Nevada Supreme Court holds potential to clarify authority.

This standoff underscores clashing priorities in pretrial justice – speedy release versus safety safeguards. As the Supreme Court weighs in, Las Vegas courts and police navigate uncharted legal waters. What do you think about the balance between judicial orders and police discretion? Tell us in the comments.

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