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North Las Vegas Municipal Court, Nevada

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The North Las Vegas Municipal Court resides in Nevada. Click on the links below to learn more about the court's...

Jurisdiction

This court holds the following jurisdiction:[1]

Municipal courts are also courts of limited jurisdiction. They handle violations of city ordinances, proceedings to abate a nuisance within a city, actions for collection of city taxes or assessments up to $2,500, and similar matters.[2]

Judges


Office Name Party Date assumed office
North Las Vegas Municipal Court Department 1 Chris Lee Nonpartisan January 2, 2023
North Las Vegas Municipal Court Department 2 Courtney Ketter Nonpartisan January 2, 2023


Elections

Nevada is one of 43 states that hold elections for judicial positions. To learn more about judicial selection in Nevada, click here.

Selection method

See also: Judicial selection in the states
See also: Nonpartisan election

Judges of the Nevada Municipal Courts are each elected to six-year terms. The elections for this court are nonpartisan contested elections.[3] To serve on this court, a judge must be a city resident, qualified elector, may not have retired or been removed from judicial office, and licensed and admitted to practice law in Nevada.[4]

Judicial elections in Nevada

See also: Nevada judicial elections

Nevada is one of 12 states that uses nonpartisan elections to select judges and does not use retention elections for subsequent terms. To read more about how states use judicial elections to select judges across the country, click here.

Primary election

The primary is held on the second Tuesday in June in even-numbered years.[5]

In the nonpartisan primary, the two candidates who receive the greatest number of votes advance to the general election. Though Nevada has a closed primary system, where voters may only vote for members of their own political party, this does not impact the judicial elections, which are nonpartisan. Voters registered with either major party, or those who are not registered with any political party, may still vote for all judicial candidates in the primaries.[6][7]

If there are only two candidates who file to run for any one seat, they skip the primary and compete only in the general election.[8]

Unopposed candidates

If only one candidate files for election to any one seat, he or she must still appear on the primary ballot. They then only need at least one vote in the primary to be elected to office without appearing on the general election ballot.

Only candidates in contested elections may accept campaign contributions; unopposed judicial candidates may not.[9]

See also



External links

Footnotes