LAS VEGAS — A jury in a hushed courtroom saw security video of a person wearing bright orange clothing slip into the yard of a home where a veteran Las Vegas investigative journalist was ambushed and killed nearly two years ago as the trial of a former elected county official charged with the reporter’s murder began Wednesday.
The video was from the home of Holly and Row Bailey, longtime neighbors and friends of Jeff German, a Las Vegas Review-Journal reporter. The Baileys each wept as they told the jury that they thought it was odd that German's garage door remained open all day with his car inside, but they could not reach him by telephone or text message.
''That person stays, lying in wait, for Jeff German,'' prosecutor Pamela Weckerly told jurors during opening statements in the high-profile trial. ''Mr. German opens his garage, goes into that side yard, and he is attacked.''
German, who lived alone, was found the next day in the side yard, slashed and stabbed to death. It was Labor Day weekend 2022. He was 69.
The killing of German, who spent 44 years covering Las Vegas mobsters and public officials, and the arrest several days later of Robert Telles, formerly the elected Democratic administrator of a Clark County office of unclaimed estates, stunned Las Vegas and the world of journalism.
Prosecutors say articles that German wrote critical of Telles and a county office in turmoil, including allegations that Telles had an inappropriate relationship with a subordinate employee, provided Telles' motive for the killing.
Telles, 47, has pleaded not guilty to murder with a deadly weapon of a person age 60 or older, and could face life in prison if he's convicted. Prosecutors aren't seeking the death penalty. Telles has said he didn't kill German, was framed for the crime and police mishandled the investigation.
After German's first articles appeared in May 2022, Telles lost a party primary to keep his elected position. Weckerly told the jury that German was preparing another article about Telles when he died.