Las Vegas Strip Would Ban All Criminals by Judicial Fiat Under New Law

Las Vegas Strip Would Ban All Criminals by Judicial Fiat Under New Law.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

Opening a beer bottle on the Las Vegas Strip could get you banned from the Strip for a year. At least technically it could, according to an ordinance proposed at last week’s Clark County Commission meeting.

A little-known Clark County law currently allows judges to ban the drug dealers and prostitutes they convict from setting foot on the Strip for up to a year. This new proposal seeks to expand that late-’90s ordinance to all criminals. Violating a previous ban would be a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in prison and/or a $1,000 fine.

Las Vegas Strip street performer pauses between tips on the Las Vegas Strip.A Las Vegas Strip street performer pauses between selfie poses with tourists for tips across from the Paris Las Vegas Hotel Casino. (Image: Las Vegas Review-Journal)

In addition to carrying an open glass container of alcohol, other activities currently considered illegal while walking Las Vegas Boulevard from Russell Road to Sahara Avenue include smoking marijuana — recreational or medical — feeding pigeons, and even (?!* @!) cursing. (Read )

Street Performers, Homeless Would Feel Ban First

However, what troubles the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) is not the potential for visitors to be banned for violating rarely enforced laws. It’s the disproportionate effect the proposed ordinance would have on Las Vegas’ most vulnerable population.

An ACLU spokesperson told KVVU-TV that it would encourage businesses to report all homeless people and street performers, hoping to either get them banned or locked up for violating previous bans.

The Clark County law governing the Strip forbids “sleeping upon the public sidewalk” and “obstructing, delaying, hindering, blocking, hampering, or interfering with pedestrian passage.” Both laws are used to remove homeless people and street performers. (The Strip lies not in the City of Las Vegas, but the unincorporated Clark County town of Paradise, Nev.)

The new “stay out” orders would apply to anyone convicted on the Strip “as a condition of a suspended sentence or deferred adjudication of any criminal offense.” The ordinance was introduced by Clark County Commissioner Jim Gordon in response to a 15.8%  jump in total crime last year on the Strip.

Public Reaction Mixed

Reaction to the ordinance seems evenly split, at least judging from comments on the news story posted by KVVU’s YouTube channel. YouTube user Sparkytuttle2 wrote: “Let the cops watch for gangs, violent offenders … and not worry about how shook up the low level offender is going to be at a misdemeanor.” Conversely, YouTube user Keith nol3 wrote: “Don’t break the law and this won’t be a problem for you.”

A public hearing for the ordinance revision is set for 10 a.m. Tuesday, August 2 at the Clark County Government Center.

Pedestrian Bridge Ban Tabled

Another ordinance, proposed in May by the Clark County Commissioners, would have banned panhandlers, vendors, musicians, and anyone else from loitering on the Strip’s pedestrian bridges, treating the structures as crosswalks. Las Vegas police pushed for the ordinance after an off-duty officer was stabbed to death on a pedestrian bridge in March. However, after closed-door meetings with ACLU attorneys, that ordinance was tabled for the foreseeable future.

Article Sources
Omaha Casino Build Begins, First of Three WarHorse Nebraska Gaming Projects editorial policy.
  1. GVC Gets Shareholder Approval for Takeover of Ladbrokes Coral

Compare Accounts
×
Boyd Furloughing Most Staff on April 11, Execs Taking Pay Cuts as Company Grapples With Coronavirus Closures
Provider
Name
Description
Casino Crime Roundup: Vegas Hotel Room ‘Massage’ Turns Into Armed Robbery  Fanatics Likely to Up Offer, Ultimately Win PointsBet US, Says Research Firm  Wynn Investors Receive $70M in Securities Fraud Lawsuit  Death by Selfie: How Kim Jong-nam’s Facebook ‘Casino Selfies’ May Have Done Him In  Tiny California Tribe Pays Highest Interest on Casino Junk Bond Since Economic Crash  State Gaming Regulations Force Nevada Independent to Fold Online Poker Tourney Fundraiser Plans  The 13 Macau Owner Changing Name to South Shore Holdings, Hotel Targets April Opening  MLB Strikes Deal With Anti-Match-Fixing Integrity Firm in a First for US Sports  Caesars Reports Mixed Third Quarter Results, WSOP TV Ratings Also Mixed  Powerball, Mega Millions To Be Impacted By Federal Interest Rate Cut