
Pool photo/Marilyn Newton - Darren Mack, right, listens intently as his attorney William Routsis questions Mack's brother, Landon during a hearing Tuesday where Darren Mack is attempting to withdraw his guilty plea on charges that he murdered his wife, Charla, then shot family court judge Chuck Weller in June 2006.
Darren Mack's previous defense lawyers, David Chesnoff and Scott Freeman, were among the witnesses expected to be called during the hearing, scheduled to last two days or longer.
Chesnoff — a Las Vegas lawyer who has represented accused mobsters, boxer Mike Tyson, magian David Copperfield, Hells Angels and chief executives — has not commented on the evolving legal case, saying only that he would save his remarks for the witness stand.
The hearing ended for the day at 5:45 p.m. and was scheduled to resume Wednesday 8:45 a.m.
District Judge Douglas Herndon said Chesnoff was scheduled to testify at some point on Wednesday. On Tuesday, Chesnoff filed a motion seeking to quash a subpoena sent by Mack's new attorneys ordering him to produce documents.
"I know there's a lot of animosity," the judge remarked at one point in the hearing Tuesday, noting tension between Mack and his new lawyers and the former defense attorneys.
Mack, 46, wants to withdraw his pleas to killing his wife, Charla, in June 2006, and the sniper-style shooting of Family Court Judge Chuck Weller.
Mack and his lawyers argued early on that Mack killed his wife in self defense, and he pleaded not guilty to murder. He pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to shooting and wounding Weller, who has since recovered and returned to the bench.
The case generated intense media interest, and Mack's trial was moved from Reno to Las Vegas after a judge determined that an unbiased jury could not be found in Washoe County.
But it came to a surprise end Nov. 5, when Mack pleaded guilty to murdering his wife. He pleaded the Nevada equivalent of no contest to attempted murder in shooting Weller. Mack did not admit guilt, but acknowledged prosecutors had enough evidence to convict him.
Mack fired his attorneys a month later, hired Reno lawyers William Routsis and Bruce Lindsay in their place, and is now seeking to withdraw his pleas and take the case to trial.
In a court declaration, Mack claimed Freeman and Chesnoff told him for more than a year that he would be acquitted, then did an about-face and pressed him to plead after Mack's family paid the final installment of a $1.25 million legal fee.
Additionally, Mack said he told Freeman where he had thrown out the knife used in the attack on Charla Mack, along with a gun Mack claims misfired when his estranged wife tried to shoot him.
According to the declaration, Mack said Freeman refused to look for the weapons, despite Mack's contention the gun would have Charla Mack's fingerprints on it and show evidence of a misfire, supporting his argument that he was defending himself.
During testimony Tuesday, Michon Wells, a sergeant with the Washoe County sheriff's office who oversaw transporting Mack to and from court appearances, said Mack was "quiet" when he returned to Reno from Las Vegas after the trial ended.
"I asked him if he was OK," Wells said. "He was quiet. He told me he wasn't going to talk. He seemed angry."
"He stated that he did not murder his wife."
Later, Mack's brother, Landon Mack, testified that Freeman and Chesnoff contacted him on the Friday before Mack's surprise plea, and told him to bring family members to court on Monday to visit with Mack before court began.
"I was instructed to assemble the family," Landon Mack said. "I was told Darren would be testifying Monday morning and we could have a contact visit (before court) to keep him calm."
When they arrived at the courthouse at 7 a.m., Landon Mack said his brother, defense lawyers and others were already in the courtroom.
"As soon as I walked in my brother said, 'My defense team says I can't win,'" Landon Mack said. "I was fully in shock."
He added that he requested to speak with his brother privately with only a bailiff present, but Chesnoff wouldn't allow it.

