Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lawyers for basketball star appeal DUI ruling

- By David Ferrara Contact David Ferrara at dferrara@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-1039. Follow @randompoke­r on Twitter.

Lawyers for Las Vegas basketball standout Zaon Collins are challengin­g a judge’s decision to uphold charges against the teen in a deadly wreck.

In court papers filed Tuesday, attorneys David Chesnoff and Richard Schonfeld argued that prosecutor­s “have shown a conscious indifferen­ce” for Collins’ rights.

They argued that the

Clark County district attorney’s office should not have continued to pursue felony DUI and reckless driving charges against Collins after a grand jury refused to return an indictment on the DUI count. The lawyers have said Collins was not impaired by marijuana at the time of a December crash that left Eric Echevarria dead.

District Attorney Steve Wolfson did not respond to a request for comment.

Last week, Justice of the Peace Suzan Baucum refused to dismiss the charges. The filing from Collins’ attorneys asks a higher court judge to order the dismissal.

While the grand jury approved one count of reckless driving, prosecutor­s continued to pursue both counts in the lower court and have said they would push for a preliminar­y hearing, where Baucum would decide whether prosecutor­s have enough evidence to take the case to trial.

Authoritie­s have said Collins, 19 at the time, was driving his 2016 Dodge Challenger at nearly 90 mph in a 35 mph zone near Fort Apache and Blue Diamond roads when he crashed into a 2016 Hyundai Accent driven by Echevarria, a military veteran and an elementary school employee.

Echevarria, 52, died on the way to a hospital.

Collins played at Bishop Gorman High School before he was recruited by UNLV.

Echevarria was an Army and National Guard veteran who grew up in New York City and had called Las Vegas home for about two decades.

Las Vegas police said the basketball player had 3.0 nanograms per milliliter of THC in his system. The legal limit for drivers in Nevada at the time of the crash was 2.0 nanograms per milliliter. His lawyers said the level of THC in his system was so low that it could have been consumed days before the crash.

Collins’ attorneys also argued that a state law, enacted July 1, should apply to his case. That statute removed a prohibitio­n on specific amounts of marijuana in a driver’s blood for misdemeano­r cases but maintained the restrictio­n in felony DUI cases.

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