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Zaon Collins

Doneoett

National Player of the Year
Jun 15, 2015
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A judge on Monday declined to remand Zaon Collins back into custody after prosecutors said the former UNLV basketball recruit twice tested positive for methamphetamine.

Chief Deputy District Attorney Chad Lexis had requested for Collins’ bail to be increased after the drug was detected in Collins’ sweat from samples collected May 16 and May 31. Defense attorney Richard Schonfeld said Collins “vehemently denies” using methamphetamine, and expressed doubt at the accuracy of the drug tests.

Collins is accused of driving 88 mph in a 35 mph zone and being impaired by marijuana on Dec. 30, 2020, when he was involved in a crash that killed 52-year-old Eric Echevarria.

Instead of increasing Collins’ bail, Las Vegas Justice of the Peace Ann Zimmerman said Collins would now be subject to random blood tests to check for drugs.

“I’m going to be honest, I understand the state’s concern with the positive tests, but I’m not sure if I remanded him into custody, increased the bail and he posted that and got out, what did we accomplish?” Zimmerman said during a court hearing on Monday morning.

Zimmerman also denied a request for Collins to be allowed to attend college out of state, after his defense attorneys said he was offered a full athletic scholarship to Salt Lake Community College. The college did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday.

In court records filed last month, Schonfeld and defense attorney David Chesnoff argued that the drug test results “are not reliable and should not be considered as evidence that Mr. Collins violated conditions of his release.”

The attorneys argued that environmental factors could affect the patch used to test someone’s sweat for drugs, and that prosecutors did not report the positive results until over a month after the first patch was collected, court records show.

Lexis said Monday that Collins had also tested positive for amphetamine, which is a metabolite produced when methamphetamine is broken down inside the body.

Zimmerman said it appeared prosecutors were only trying to remand Collins’ bail because it is a high-profile case.

“I’ve got plenty of other cases where people are positive on the SCRAM patch or monitor, and I’m getting no motions from the state regarding those,” Zimmerman said.

Lexis argued that drug test results are frequently brought up during status checks, but he filed a motion in Collins’ case for the judge to rule on it before Collins’ next scheduled court appearance in September.

Eric Echevarria’s wife, Ann Marie Echevarria, stormed out of the courtroom during Monday’s hearing.

“He’s going to kill somebody else; he killed my husband,” she shouted as she left the courtroom.

In a text message to the Review-Journal, she expressed anger at Zimmerman’s decision.

“I would like to add that he is allowed to drive after killing my husband when he was high,” she said. “Now he’s on worse drugs and judge Anne [sic] Zimmerman released him again.”

In June, Collins was released from electronic ankle monitoring after he told Zimmerman he wanted to start attending college. Collins said Monday he is set to start part-time at the College of Southern Nevada in August.

After Zimmerman said she wouldn’t allow Collins to attend college in Utah, she told him to enroll full-time in CSN.

Las Vegas police have said that at the time of the crash, Collins had 3 nanograms of THC per milliliter of blood in his system. The legal limit for drivers in Nevada at the time was 2 nanograms per milliliter.

Collins’ lawyers have presented a case to the Nevada Supreme Court arguing that the 2 nanograms limit was arbitrarily set. They have argued that the level of THC in Collins’ system was so low, it could have been consumed days before the crash.

Further justice court proceedings have been on hold while the high court weighs the issue.
 
Just tragic all the way around - for the kid, screwed up his whole life -had a bright future- then the loss for the family. just sad and tragic all the way around. I hate hearing stuff like this.
 
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Just tragic all the way around - for the kid, screwed up his whole life -had a bright future- then the loss for the family. just sad and tragic all the way around. I hate hearing stuff like this.
From Collins perspective it was a tragedy. From the family of the dead father it was an outrage.

For years I’ve had a difficult time getting my brain around how to forgive people who have killed others through irresponsible acts. I really don’t think I’ll ever figure a way to make enough sense out of it to be able to completely forgive.

About 35 years ago My son had a good friend who was killed while standing at a school bus stop. The young woman who killed him was drunk and ended up serving some time. The entire episode, however, absolutely destroyed this boy’s father.

Her punishment was really no satisfaction.
 
From Collins perspective it was a tragedy. From the family of the dead father it was an outrage.

For years I’ve had a difficult time getting my brain around how to forgive people who have killed others through irresponsible acts. I really don’t think I’ll ever figure a way to make enough sense out of it to be able to completely forgive.

About 35 years ago My son had a good friend who was killed while standing at a school bus stop. The young woman who killed him was drunk and ended up serving some time. The entire episode, however, absolutely destroyed this boy’s father.

Her punishment was really no satisfaction.
The Corina King case changed how Vegas charged Fatal Dui cases. Much more lenient before for that.
 
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What was the name of the woman who fell asleep at the wheel killing kids who we’re picking up trash on side of the road

they blamed weed too..
 
The interesting thing is that she killed six teens back in 2000 and was sentenced to 36 months to 90 months in prison for each of six victims to run consecutively and ended up serving 19 years (she was high on drugs), while in the same year a man who was drunk driving and killed 3 received 60 years. The sentencing has always been so arbitrary and based more on who you are and if people like you, and not on the crime!
 
Jessica Williams. She was released from prison a couple years ago also I think.
Thank you..
Jessica Williams, She was recently released If I remember correctly.
I’d like to hookup. That case was wild. Dude I been using weed for 5 years..

I fell asleep one time coming home after working at Circus Circus midway back in 1994. But I wasn’t on weed
 
Thank you..

I’d like to hookup. That case was wild. Dude I been using weed for 5 years..

I fell asleep one time coming home after working at Circus Circus midway back in 1994. But I wasn’t on weed
We smells weed everywhere we go except Mt. Charleston visit. WTFing deal? That alone will stop me from visiting Vegas at least with my family. My hotel floor lobby was a constant stench.
 
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We smells weed everywhere we go except Mt. Charleston visit. WTFing deal? That alone will stop me from visiting Vegas at least with my family. My hotel floor lobby was a constant stench.
I smell it walking around the hospital campus. You smell it walking into restaurants. Doesn’t really matter where you are, you can’t go 10 minutes without smelling it.

And when you see Scrub, think of pigpen with a perpetual cloud around him …
 
Some of these idiots smoking weed don't think they are under the same rules in regards to smoking indoors. I was at a restaurant a few weeks ago and a guy and girl were smoking weed at there table in the restaurant and the manager told them they couldn't smoke indoors and would have to leave if they didn't stop. They got into an argument and said then they wouldn't pay their bill. I was happy to here the manager tell them that he would call the police and have them arrested if they didn't pay. He physically stopped them from leaving, but they did pay as they were tossed out!
 
I smell it walking around the hospital campus. You smell it walking into restaurants. Doesn’t really matter where you are, you can’t go 10 minutes without smelling it.

And when you see Scrub, think of pigpen with a perpetual cloud around him …

But the taxes from it are going to the schools right???
 
Some of these idiots smoking weed don't think they are under the same rules in regards to smoking indoors. I was at a restaurant a few weeks ago and a guy and girl were smoking weed at there table in the restaurant and the manager told them they couldn't smoke indoors and would have to leave if they didn't stop. They got into an argument and said then they wouldn't pay their bill. I was happy to here the manager tell them that he would call the police and have them arrested if they didn't pay. He physically stopped them from leaving, but they did pay as they were tossed out!
It’s all over the place. It’s to the point where weed was such a distinctive smell that you’d perk up and look around. Now it’s just a smell you’re used to. I used to think it smelled awful. Maybe it still does. I just don’t notice it.

I still don’t think it’s a bad idea, though. It’s not like fentanyl or coke or something that can kill you by itself. As long as the laws exist to keep it within guardrails, I really don’t mind it. People should be able to do these sorts of things. Want to have a beer? Have a beer. You want to smoke? Go for it. But don’t drive … And if you are a complete moron in public, you can get the arrest for intoxication. Honestly, I thought it might bother me more than it actually does. To each their own. You know, freedom …
 
It’s all over the place. It’s to the point where weed was such a distinctive smell that you’d perk up and look around. Now it’s just a smell you’re used to. I used to think it smelled awful. Maybe it still does. I just don’t notice it.

I still don’t think it’s a bad idea, though. It’s not like fentanyl or coke or something that can kill you by itself. As long as the laws exist to keep it within guardrails, I really don’t mind it. People should be able to do these sorts of things. Want to have a beer? Have a beer. You want to smoke? Go for it. But don’t drive … And if you are a complete moron in public, you can get the arrest for intoxication. Honestly, I thought it might bother me more than it actually does. To each their own. You know, freedom …
It a very invasive drug! It may not be as bad as driving drunk still hinders your ability to drive! I see cop shows and they are let go. They should arrest them and given the same amount of points as if you were on you phone or when your driving drunk! As for smoking weed in general. There is a correlation with weed and overall poor decision making ( crime , schooling, jobs and their demeanor)in general! Its accepted in certain communities at the detriment of their said community!
 
Weed and poor decision making? Lol

weed just makes you plain stupid.
 
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