Intentar ORO - Gratis
Murder & Loathing in Las Vegas
Esquire US
|Winter 2023
The employees of the deeply dysfunctional Clark County public administrator's office were at odds over their ambitious boss, Robert Telles. Then Vegas's biggest newspaper published an exposé on his chaotic leadership, the investigative reporter behind the story turned up dead-and Telles was charged with his murder. Now his staff is left wondering: How did it come to this?
ROBERT TELLES ISN'T WILLING TO DISCUSS how his DNA ended up under the fingernails of Jeff German. Or why his wife's car was spotted near the sixty-nine-year-old investigative reporter's house on a warm Friday morning in early September, a day before a neighbor discovered German's lifeless body at the side of his Las Vegas home. Or how an outfit matching the one worn by the suspect captured on security-cam footage wound up in Telles's home.
Speaking to me at the Clark County Detention Center, a couple miles north of the Vegas Strip, Telles is serious but engaged. Eager to please, even. But he must be careful about what he says.
His court-appointed lawyers at the time made that clear. The man charged with premeditated murder in one of the most sensational cases in recent history here-one that drew the attention of virtually every major newspaper and network in the country-is short and lean, with dark eyes framed by black caterpillar brows beneath a gleaming bald head. He's no longer wearing the thick white bandages that were wrapped around his forearms, covering up what officials said were defensive wounds, when he first appeared in court, six days after German's murder. He faced the judge that day with a wry smile before being led back to jail in shackles.

Esta historia es de la edición Winter 2023 de Esquire US.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Esquire US
Esquire US
What I've Learned
TODAY, EVERYBODY WHO HAS A ROOF has a show.
4 mins
April / May 2026
Esquire US
Marcus
How the head coach of Notre Dame tamed the Wild West of college football-and why the NFL is desperately trying to lure him to the pros
2 mins
April / May 2026
Esquire US
It Should Have Been Sinners
The film was more deserving of Best Picture than One Battle After Another, whose portrayal of Black people is somewhere between problematic and anti-Black
6 mins
April / May 2026
Esquire US
Fernando Mendoza
So you won the Heisman Trophy. And a national championship. And everyone knows you're going first in the draft. Great. Life is going to be harder in the NFL. Good thing you've got a plan.
12 mins
April / May 2026
Esquire US
Eileen Gu
The freestyle skier is a supercomputer on the slopes, racking up six Olympic medals during her career. Before you ask: She has much more where that came from.
3 mins
April / May 2026
Esquire US
Shams Charania
If anything major goes down in the Association -trades, ACL tears, firings-chances are this man told you about it first.
3 mins
April / May 2026
Esquire US
Why Mavericks Matter
MY TWO DAUGHTERS ARE LITTLE JOCKS-SOCCER, basketball, softball, hockey.
2 mins
April / May 2026
Esquire US
What the Hell Did I Just Hear?
Film composer Ludwig Göransson, a muse to some of Hollywood's top directors, transforms a film into something else entirely
4 mins
April / May 2026
Esquire US
MR. BIG PUFF
Shigeru Kaneko, chief buyer of Beams Plus, reveals the inspiration behind his standout down jacket
1 min
April / May 2026
Esquire US
Man, American, Seeks Purpose
In his new book, Jordan Ritter Conn presents a group portrait of the struggles and triumphs of men today
2 mins
April / May 2026
Translate
Change font size

