LAS VEGAS — A surprise text ended a prosecutor's questioning Thursday of a former Las Vegas-area politician standing trial in the killing of a veteran investigative reporter, after a long day of sometimes rambling testimony during which the defendant declared that he never killed anyone.
In a hushed courtroom, before a rapt jury with a murder conviction on the line, prosecutor Christopher Hamner asked defendant Robert Telles to read a message showing that Telles' wife wondered where he was about the time reporter Jeff German was ambushed and killed outside his home nearly two years ago.
''It says, ‘Where are you?''' Telles responded.
Telles testified earlier that he ignored several text, email and voice messages while he was at home, went for a walk and then to a gym the day German was killed. Prosecutors have suggested he left the phone at home as he executed a meticulously planned fatal attack on the journalist.
Hamner zeroed in on cellphone records presented Wednesday by a defense witness that included no listing of the text from Telles' wife. The prosecutor said it was found separately, on her Apple watch device.
Telles conceded Thursday that as the owner of the phone, he could have deleted the message. He did not admit that he did.
Hamner noted the time — 10:30 a.m. on Sept. 2, 2022 — was the time security video presented earlier to the jury showed a maroon SUV that Telles has agreed looked just like his in German's neighborhood. It was driven by a person wearing an orange outfit and a big straw hat. Telles himself referred several times Thursday to that person as German's killer.
Where Telles was when German was fatally attacked has been a key question since the trial started — including during 2 1/2 hours of unusual stream-of-consciousness testimony from Telles.