Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • -I'm here today with top Las Vegas criminal defense

  • lawyer, Michael Becker.

  • And Mike, today I want to ask you

  • about the Nevada crime of resisting arrest.

  • And the term resisting arrest is kind

  • of a buzz word in our culture.

  • And I think most people think of it in the context of,

  • the cops are trying to arrest you and you struggle.

  • And you try to keep from being handcuffed,

  • or fight with the police.

  • But actually, the law here in Nevada

  • is even broader than that.

  • Is that right?

  • -That's correct.

  • It's willfully resisting or obstructing law enforcement.

  • So we've seen people that were charged

  • under this provision of the NRS statutes.

  • For example, pulling their hand away when the officer went

  • to put handcuffs on them, or the officer asked them their name

  • and they gave a false name.

  • That could be the basis for a charge of willfully obstructing

  • or resisting law enforcement.

  • -And certainly, if you struggle with the officer,

  • or if you get in a fight with a police officer,

  • then that could be resisting arrest or something even more

  • serious.

  • -That's correct.

  • I mean, if you run away from the police

  • or resist them in matters that we've spoken of previously,

  • that would likely lead to a misdemeanor charge

  • for willfully resisting or obstructing.

  • But if you threaten a police officer,

  • or if you strike a police officer,

  • there are more serious charges, including battery on a police

  • officer, which could be a felony if injury occurs.

  • -And that potentially could send someone

  • to prison for a number of years.

  • -That's correct.

  • -Have you had success in defending clients

  • over the years who are charged with resisting arrest?

  • -Yes.

  • If often depends on the circumstances

  • that led to the contact with law enforcement.

  • But more often than not, if you can

  • show that the defendant is not guilty

  • of the underlying conduct that gave rise to the charge,

  • a prosecutor and/or a court will be

  • a lot more likely to consider dismissing

  • the charge of resisting or obstructing arrest.

  • -And what if it's a cop that-- let's

  • say you have a client who contacts you and the officer is

  • just exaggerating, or the officer

  • was brutal with the client.

  • And we see that a lot here in Nevada.

  • Are there things that you could do to sort of investigate

  • the police officer's background and kind of help bolster

  • our client's story as opposed to the police officer's?

  • -There are.

  • We can, if we have a situation where the client says

  • that the officer was being overly

  • aggressive or inappropriate or using unnecessary force,

  • placing the handcuffs on too tightly

  • or pulling the arm back too abruptly.

  • -Which is very common, right?

  • -It is common.

  • And we can do a motion to look into the personnel records

  • of a police officer and determine

  • whether similar types of accusations

  • have been made against the officer in the past.

  • And if we can show a prosecutor and/or a judge that we're

  • dealing with a situation where the officer may have

  • a history of being very aggressive,

  • then they're going to be a lot more receptive to our argument

  • that our client wasn't resisting, but was merely

  • rightfully protecting their personal sanctity.

  • -So the take-home message to our audience

  • would be if you're charged with resisting arrest,

  • or battery on a police officer, something

  • similar, it's often in your interest to get a good lawyer

  • and to fight back, because it may be possible to get

  • the charges reduced or ultimately dismissed.

  • -That's correct.

  • I don't believe that a normally law-abiding person

  • is going to be predisposed to resisting law enforcement.

  • For the most part, we respect law enforcement

  • and we do what they tell us to do.

  • Often, there's a story behind the story.

  • So we like to sit down with our clients

  • and hear their side of the event so that we can go into court

  • and fight for an acquittal or a dismissal

  • of those types of charges.

  • I'm attorney Michael Becker with the Las Vegas Defense Group.

  • If you've been charged here in Nevada with resisting

  • an arrest, call me 702-DEFENSE, and we'll

  • talk about what we can do to get your charges reduced

  • or dismissed.

-I'm here today with top Las Vegas criminal defense

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it