Tavari Pearson Sentencing (Nevada, 2024)
Tavari Pearson Sentencing (Nevada, 2024) documents the case of Tavari Pearson, who at age 15 brutally attacked his therapist at a Clark County youth facility — hitting her with a rock, strangling her, sexually assaulting her, and leaving her in a ravine — and received a sentence of just six months from Judge Erika Ballou, despite prosecutors seeking 8 to 20 years. Within months of release, Pearson was indicted on new felony charges.
The Attack (May 6, 2022)
Pearson was a juvenile offender housed at Spring Mountain Youth Camp, a Clark County residential facility. During an outdoor counseling session, Pearson told his therapist he was upset about being kicked off his high school track team. She suggested they take a walk outside.[1]
- Pushed the therapist to the ground and pinned her hands
- Punched her repeatedly
- Hit her in the head with a rock, fracturing her face in multiple places
- Strangled her
- Pushed her into a ravine
- Sexually assaulted her
- Left her "basically to die in a ravine"
Clark County knew Pearson had sexually assaulted someone before the attack but failed to notify the therapist.[1]
The victim suffered nearly $140,000 in medical bills and continues to suffer ongoing headaches, dizziness, balance problems, facial and scalp scarring, nightmares, and panic attacks.[1]
The Sentence (December 2024)
Pearson was charged as an adult and faced six charges. He took a plea deal, pleading guilty to just two counts. Prosecutors requested 8 to 20 years in prison.[2]
Judge Erika Ballou sentenced Pearson to six months behind bars followed by five years of probation, with credit for the two-and-a-half years he had already served. He was immediately released.[2]
Ballou, a former public defender, wrote in the record that the court "wanted people to get help" and felt Pearson would not receive adequate counseling in prison. She sided with the public defender's recommendation to place Pearson in a program at Desert Regional Center, a state agency serving people with developmental disabilities.[2]
Former Clark County District Attorney David Roger warned at the time: "There will be a lot of people who will disagree with this sentence."[2]
The victim's attorney, Robert Murdock, called it "an obvious miscarriage of justice."[1]
Judge Ballou
Judge Erika Ballou was separately serving a six-month suspension from the bench without pay, imposed by the Nevada Commission on Judicial Discipline in an unrelated case, at the time KTNV reported on the Pearson case.[2]
Reoffending (September–November 2025)
Months after his release into a probation program, Pearson was indicted on December 19, 2025 for 21 separate crimes committed between September and November 2025:[2]
- Multiple car thefts and burglaries
- Possession of firearms by a prohibited person (two 9mm pistols)
The eight-count indictment validated concerns from legal experts who had called the original sentence too lenient.[2]
Civil Judgment
- March 2025 — Clark County settled its portion of a civil lawsuit for $300,000 after confirming the county knew of Pearson's prior sexual assault history and failed to warn the therapist[1]
- February 3, 2026 — A court entered a $20.5 million default judgment against Pearson after he failed to appear, plead, or otherwise defend. The judgment includes punitive damages for "intentional, depraved and violent misconduct." The victim's attorney acknowledged she may never see the money.[1]
Significance
- A 15-year-old with a known prior sexual assault was placed in unsupervised counseling sessions
- The attack was one of the most violent sexual assaults in the case record — attempted murder, rape, left for dead
- Prosecutors sought up to 20 years; the judge gave six months
- The defendant reoffended within months, committing 21 additional crimes including illegal firearms possession
- The judge who issued the lenient sentence was herself separately suspended from the bench