LAS VEGAS — A former Las Vegas-area Democratic elected official was sentenced Wednesday to at least 28 years in Nevada state prison for killing an investigative journalist who wrote articles critical of his conduct in office two years ago and exposed an intimate relationship with a female coworker.
A judge invoked sentencing enhancements for use of a deadly weapon and the age of the reporter to add eight years to the minimum 20-years-to-life sentence that a jury set in August after finding Robert Telles guilty of first-degree murder.
''The judge couldn't sentence him to any more time,'' Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson said after telling reporters the sentence represented justice for the community. ''She gave him the maximum.''
Telles, 47, testified in his defense at trial, denying he stabbed Las Vegas Review-Journal reporter Jeff German to death in September 2022. But evidence against him was strong — including his DNA beneath German's fingernails.
Telles was the administrator of a county office that handles unclaimed estate and probate cases when he was arrested and jailed without bail several days after German's killing. He was stripped of his elected position weeks later.
Standing in shackles before Clark County District Court Judge Michelle Leavitt, Telles offered ''deepest condolences'' to German's family but again denied responsibility.
''I understand the desire to seek justice and hold somebody accountable for this,'' he said. ''But I did not kill Mr. German.''
Prosecutor Pamela Weckerly told the judge that evidence showed Telles killed German because ''he didn't like what Mr. German had written about him. He felt that Mr. German had cost him an elected position."