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Attorney accused of assault

Las Vegas defense attorney Michael Amador started his Thanksgiving holiday at a PT's Pub, continued it with a trip to Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center and ended it at the Clark County Detention Center.

Amador, 54, who ineffectively defended Margaret Rudin in the 2001 murder trial of her millionaire husband, was arrested Thursday on two felony counts of assault with a deadly weapon and one count of injury to the property of another, according to a Las Vegas police arrest report.

The report said that police were called to PT's Pub, 3470 E. Sunset Road, about 5 a.m. When officers arrived, they found Amador sitting in the parking lot, surrounded by four men.

According to witness statements, Amador had been playing pool in the bar when he accused a man watching the game, Nick Brannigan, of stealing $200 from the table. An argument ensued. Brannigan and another man, Charles Huggins, left the bar, followed by Amador.

Huggins told police he had entered his vehicle when he "heard his rear window shatter." He said he saw Brannigan and two other men wrestling with Amador, who had pulled a handgun from his waistband to break the window.

Police determined that Amador had assaulted Brannigan and Huggins when he pointed the weapon at them.

The attorney was taken to Sunrise and treated for minor injuries. He then was booked at the county jail.

A spokesman for the State Bar of Nevada said Amador has been an attorney in Nevada since 1981 and has no record of public discipline.

Amador's proficiency as an attorney was discussed during Rudin's 2001 trial, which ended in her conviction. She petitioned for a new trial in 2008, a request that was granted based in part on Amador's questionable conduct.

After Rudin's 2001 trial, attorney Tom Pitaro, who also had represented Rudin, said in an affidavit that he was shocked by how little preparation Amador had done for the trial. Pitaro said that expert witnesses had not been retained and that many witnesses had not been interviewed.

Also, Amador was accused of leaking information about Rudin and giving family photos of Rudin to the National Enquirer. And he was accused of trying to write a book about the case during the trial.

One juror sent a letter to the court saying jurors thought he was an idiot.

"He was the laughingstock in the jury room," wrote juror Coreen Kovacs in April 2005.

A woman who answered Amador's cell phone Monday said he had no comment about his arrest.

Contact reporter Mike Blasky at mblasky@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0283.

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