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MURPHY, TABISH APPEAL: Convictions upheld

Justices find ample evidence ex-lovers conspired in theft







CARSON CITY -- The Nevada Supreme Court has upheld the convictions of Sandy Murphy and Rick Tabish for stealing $7 million in silver from the late Las Vegas casino executive Ted Binion's underground vault in Nye County.

Justices ruled in separate decisions that ample evidence exists for convicting the one-time lovers on conspiracy, burglary and grand larceny charges.


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  • The decision blocks Murphy, 35, in her effort to clear her name. She was released from prison in April 2005 for time served on the charges and now lives in California.

    Tabish, 42, remains incarcerated in the Southern Desert Correctional Center but could be paroled later this year.

    They were convicted in 2000 of murdering Binion in a conspiracy to steal his silver and prevent him from cutting Murphy, his live-in girlfriend, out of his will.

    Murphy and Tabish each received life prison sentences requiring them to spend at least 22 years behind bars, but those convictions were overturned in 2003 by the Supreme Court.

    A second jury in 2004 acquitted them of the murder charges, but upheld the charges in connection with the silver theft.

    Binion, 54, was found dead on Sept. 17, 1998, in his home in Las Vegas from what appeared to be a drug overdose since pills and heroin were found near his body.

    He earlier had lost his gaming license over his heroin use. At one point he showed up at a Nevada Gaming Commission hearing after shaving off every hair on his body in a move to escape drug detection.

    In its latest Murphy decision, issued late Monday, the Supreme Court voted 2 to 1 to uphold the charge she participated in the conspiracy to steal Binion's silver.

    Justices said prosecutors showed at Murphy's trial that she had told her beautician prior to Binion's death that Tabish intended to steal silver from the vault and she stood to inherit considerable wealth.

    They also noted that when Tabish was removing the silver from Binion's vault, four phone calls were placed to him from Murphy's cell phone.

    "Based on this evidence, a rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of a conspiracy beyond a reasonable doubt," Justices Ron Parraguirre and Michael Douglas stated in the majority decision.

    In voting against upholding the burglary convictions, Justice Jim Hardesty said that Murphy's statements to her beautician about Tabish stealing the silver "does not establish that Murphy agreed to cooperate in the conspiracy."

    In addition, Hardesty stated that Murphy never told the beautician that she stood to gain money from the silver theft. Instead she said she would receive $3 million, Binion's home, a car and a jewelry store as her inheritance, he stated.

    Hardesty said that just because four calls were made to Tabish from Murphy's phone does not positively identity her as the person who made the calls.

    Similar findings were made in upholding Tabish's convictions, which was made on a 3-0 vote.

    In upholding Murphy's convictions, justices shot down his arguments that the silver charges should have been dismissed because the trial was conducted in Clark County and the crime had been committed in Nye County.

    Justices stated that "several acts that were requisite to the theft occurred in Clark County. It was in Clark County, according to the decision, that Binion commissioned Tabish to build an underground vault, and thus it was there that Tabish saw the silver" and developed his plan to steal it.

    In addition, they said there was evidence to support the silver theft convictions because Tabish admitted he lied to Nye County sheriff's deputies who approached him at the vault when he was removing silver.

    Tabish told them he was cleaning up concrete and then they discovered silver in his equipment.

    Justices also rejected Tabish's request that the more than seven years he spent in jail and in prison on the murder conviction should be credited toward his sentences on the silver theft convictions.

    But the court ruled the reversal of the murder charges did not apply to the silver convictions.

    The silver theft convictions were imposed to apply consecutively to the murder convictions, and, therefore, Tabish was not entitled to time-served credits, according to the court.

    Contact Capital Bureau Chief Ed Vogel at evogel@reviewjournal.com or (775) 687-3901.

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    Jeannie Smith wrote on November 18, 2008 01:23 PM: I mispoke, I meant Time Served on the Overturned murder charge to be used on either of the remaining charges. and of course all send here is strictly my own opinions and meanderings.....ljs


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    Loretta J Smith wrote on November 18, 2008 01:13 PM: Where fair is fair....?? Considering that Mr. Tabish will not be able to use his "Overturned Murder time" served on the battery charges, then will Mr. Tabish be fairly Compensated for said time served?? His Children could (I am certain) use some type of Compensation Amount while their Father was incarcerated! Additionally, does being found guilty on a charge of battery involving another, involving something in Mr. Tabish's past make him immediately guilty of another? This Trial was fraught with many errors and injustices. I know this sounds a bit biased (I am not and do not know any of the principles in said Trial)but don't you think that the Binion Family just might have a tiny bit (I'm being gracious here) to do with getting "rid" of a Family Member that they had in the past (not Murder but within other avenues)attempted to rid their Family Name of.....???Food for thought...Tabish & Murphy sure look like really obvious choices to pin something on...I am sure that the Binion Family Lawyers KNEW about Murphy & Tabish's personal histories. If their Lawyers didn't know anything then that is one Stupid Legal Team. They KNEW and they also KNEW Tabish and Murphy would make two bright and shining Personalities to "pin" Mr. Binion's Murder on. Don't you think?? The Binion Familie's past legal moved to rid their Family Business of their relative is a matter of public legal record. This time they might have suceeded.


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    Rudy wrote on March 05, 2008 08:03 PM: maybe one of her slick lawyers?


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    Herbie B wrote on March 05, 2008 08:55 AM: I was just wondering who Murphy was sponging off lately. She's never had a real job, other than being someone's mistress or a stripper. Heard she left Vegas, anyone know?