Skip to content

eighthjdcourt

Info about the Eighth Judicial District Court.

Monthly Archives: November 2021

Ugly sweater entries from December 2017

Lawyers, mark your calendars for the Dec. 14 Civil Bench-Bar meeting at noon on Zoom. Bench-Bar meetings are a great way to learn the latest developments in District Court and to get related questions answered.

The meeting will include and ugly sweater photo contest.
The top three favorites will receive $50 gift cards!
To be entered in the contest, snap a photo of yourself in holiday apparel and submit it
to the Bench-Bar email EJDCBenchBar@gmail.com anytime before Monday,
December 13, 2021 at 5:30 p.m. The photos will be presented in a slide-show during
the meeting; so, keep it fun and keep it legal.

Attorneys can email EJDCBenchBar@gmail.com to get the Zoom information for the meeting.

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

The Eighth Judicial District Court of Nevada is accepting employment applications for a probate commissioner position. The application closing date is Dec. 21, 2021 at 5:01 p.m.

Interested applicants should review the full application postings to apply for the probate commissioner position.PROBATE-COMMISSIONER-POSTING-11.30.2021DOWNLOAD

The probate commissioner will be primarily responsible for managing the court’s probate matters, but may be assigned other collateral duties, including but not limited to, alternative dispute resolution, short trials, arbitrations, and mediations, in civil/criminal and family court under the direction and supervision of the chief judge.

Applicants must be a member of the State Bar of Nevada who is in good standing and has been so for a minimum of five continuous years. Candidates are required to submit a resume (and preferably a cover letter).

Resumes must be received by District Court Human Resources prior to 5:01 p.m. on the posted closing date. Resumes must be submitted to the attention of EJDC Human Resources Manager Edward May via fax at (702) 671-4560, or email at EJDC Recruitment@clarkcountycourts.us, or mailed to the Regional Justice Center—District Court Administration, 200 Lewis Avenue, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89155-1791. The candidate’s name must appear clearly on the resume.

Employment is contingent upon successful completion of a background investigation. Subsequent employment background investigations may also be conducted.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

On November 11, Jon Gruden filed a civil lawsuit in the Eighth Judicial District Court of Nevada against The National Football League and Roger Goodell.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Deadly crashes caused by those driving under the influence are preventable tragedies that destroy lives. The Eighth Judicial District Court’s Felony DUI program (FDUI) recently received a $47,846 grant from the Nevada Office of Traffic Safety for FY 2022, to prevent impaired driving that result in crashes, fatalities and serious injuries.

The FDUI program receives well over 100 referrals a year and has a long history of demonstrating successful DUI deterrence through effective interventions such as breath-interlock devices, vehicular restrictions and long-term treatment. “Implementing a best-practice clinical approach to changing impaired driving behavior has proven to be more effective than legal sanctions or incarceration alone,” said District Court Chief Judge Linda Bell.   

The FDUI program boasts a successful completion rate of 75 percent. The Eighth Judicial District Court is using the grant from the Office of Traffic Safety to focus on long-term behavior change. Established in 1997, this is the third year that the FDUI court will get funds from the Office of Traffic Safety. In FY 2020 and 2021, the program was awarded a combined $87,000 to partially fund a full-time court coordinator position to work with community partners to ensure that public safety is the top priority of the FDUI program.

The clinical court coordinator develops effective clinical programming; monitors daily drug testing, treatment compliance and use of breath-interlock devices; monitors probation and house-arrest compliance; and provides treatment recommendations for the court to consider. The collaboration between the court and the court coordinator engages participants and improves program outcomes. Hearing Master Shannon Wittenberger, who hears FDUI cases said, “I believe the oversight provided by the court coordinator dramatically improves the success rates of participants in the FDUI program. The court coordinator brings clinical knowledge, experience and regimented consistency to get participants to achieve success in the program.”

“The longer we keep FDUI participants engaged in treatment, the better the chances are for success,” said DeDe Parker, the assistant court administrator responsible for juvenile and specialty court programs. “It’s our job to keep our community safe, while promoting change through treatment.”   

From January 1, 2016 through January 1, 2019, 475 clients out of 633 total discharged clients successfully completed the FDUI program, a result of a 75 percent success rate. Program success is determined on the ability to establish and maintain complete abstinence from all psychoactive substances, demonstration of a progression in treatment, demonstration of the ability to establish and utilize a recovery plan, participation in a victim impact panel and full payment of all program fees.

The felony DUI program is one of the Eighth Judicial District specialty courts that solve issues through a rigorous and coordinated approach between judges, specialty court coordinators, prosecutors, defense attorneys, Parole and Probation, law enforcement and mental health/social service/treatment professionals. All work together to help participants recover, live crime-free and become productive citizens.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,