Newly released bodycam video shows a routine traffic stop involving Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo ending within seconds after the Republican official name-dropped himself and then drove away without a citation for an alleged red-light violation.
The roughly one-minute video shows a Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department sergeant stopping Lombardo's pickup truck near Mandalay Bay on May 15 after the officer said the governor failed to come to a complete stop before making a right turn at a red light.
As the officer approaches the passenger-side window, he greets the governor.
"Hello. How you doing, sir?" the sergeant says.
Before the officer can finish explaining why he initiated the stop, Lombardo interrupts.
"I'm Joe Lombardo," the governor says.
"I'm aware," the sergeant replies before continuing, "For the red light violation back there. Your right turn onto Giles..."
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📸 IG: by Las Vegas police on May 15 over what the office described as "a question about whether Governor Lombardo had come to a complete stop while turning."
"Governor Lombardo spoke with the officer, fully complied with all instructions, and was promptly on his way," the statement said. "He remains grateful for the professionalism of the officer involved and for the service of law enforcement officers across Nevada."
The governor's office also disputed any suggestion that Lombardo was attempting to use his position to influence the officer by mentioning his name.
"At no point did the Governor invoke his office and seek — or expect — preferential treatment," the statement said.
According to the governor's office, the officer first introduced himself, and Lombardo replied by giving his own name "as a matter of courtesy."
Lombardo, a Republican who served as sheriff of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department for eight years before being elected governor in 2022, was traveling with his wife, Donna, at the time of the stop.
The video quickly drew criticism from Nevada Democrats, who questioned whether the governor received preferential treatment because of his position.
"As a former law enforcement officer, I'm outraged that Joe Lombardo thinks he's above the law and dismissed a police officer just doing his job," Nevada State Democratic Party Chair Daniele Monroe-Moreno said in a statement to the Las Vegas Review-Journal. "It's clear that Lombardo's 'tough on crime' approach doesn't actually apply to him after he name dropped his way out of a traffic violation. Nevadans deserve to know if Lombardo thinks, because of his position, he should be able to avoid responsibility for breaking the law," the statement continued.
The Nevada Republican Party defended Lombardo, arguing the stop reflected an officer's routine use of discretion rather than preferential treatment.
"As a former police officer, I know firsthand that officers use their training and discretion every day to decide whether a warning or citation is appropriate," Nevada Republican Party Chairman Michael McDonald said in a statement to Fox News Digital. "During my career, I issued plenty of warnings when I believed they were the right call."
McDonald also rejected claims that Lombardo used his position to influence the encounter.
"I've known Joe Lombardo for more than three decades, and one thing has always been true: he is a man of integrity who does not use his title or position to seek preferential treatment," McDonald said. "Throughout his career in law enforcement and as Governor, he has respected the rule of law and expected himself to be held to the same standard as everyone else. Any suggestion otherwise is nothing more than political theater."
Clark County Sheriff Kevin McMahill also defended the officer's handling of the stop, saying police officers routinely use discretion when deciding whether to issue a citation or warning. According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, McMahill said department data shows officers exercise that discretion tens of thousands of times each year.
"Just the data in and of itself tells you that there are 60,000 instances or more of discretion utilized by police officers on the scene, so I don't see it as all that different than what occurs on a daily basis," McMahill told the outlet.
McMahill also said he did not believe Lombardo was attempting to use his office to influence the encounter when he identified himself as the officer approached.
"I didn't interpret it that way," McMahill said.
The Las Vegas Police Protective Association, which endorsed Lombardo's gubernatorial campaign in 2022 and backed him again this year, defended the handling of the stop after providing the bodycam video to the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Union President Steve Grammas told the outlet the encounter reflected the type of discretion officers routinely use during traffic stops and rejected the suggestion that Lombardo received preferential treatment.
"It is an absolutely nothing car stop," Grammas told the Review-Journal. "Thousands of those happen every month. We don't write everybody a ticket."
Grammas said the sergeant already recognized Lombardo as governor and former Clark County sheriff, making it unnecessary to spend time confirming his identity before explaining the alleged violation and ending the stop with a verbal warning.
"If he wasn't the governor, no one would care about the hundreds of other stops that are done the same way," Grammas said.
The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department has previously said Lombardo was not cited, noting that officers commonly exercise discretion during minor traffic violations.
Fox News Digital reached out to the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department and the American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada for comment.