Nye County Man Faces Burglary, Theft, Drug Charges in March Booking
Christopher Green, 39, booked before dawn March 28 in Pahrump on burglary, multiple theft counts, and drug possession; one burglary count carries a $20,000 bond.

Christopher Green, 39, was booked into the Nye County detention facility at 4:54 a.m. on March 28, facing multiple counts of burglary of a building, theft charges spanning two separate value ranges, and possession of a controlled substance weighing less than one gram, according to his public booking record.
The combination of charges is the kind Pahrump business owners recognize with immediate concern: a suspect allegedly entering structures without authorization, removing property across varying dollar amounts, and carrying a controlled substance at the time of arrest. The Nye County Sheriff's Office and the Nye County District Attorney's Office have not publicly released a police narrative connecting these counts to specific locations or to prior burglary reports filed in the area.
Bond amounts attached to the booking reflect both the number and the alleged severity of the charges. Individual theft counts carry $1,000 and $2,000 bonds. Burglary counts and the drug count each carry $5,000 bonds. One burglary count alone carries a $20,000 bond, a figure that signals the seriousness detention staff assigned to that specific allegation at intake.
For Pahrump's small-business community, a burglary charge is not an abstraction. A confirmed break-in triggers insurance claims, lock replacements, inventory audits, and days of disrupted operations. When multiple building-burglary counts appear on a single booking record alongside theft charges logged in two distinct dollar bands, the outstanding question for investigators is whether multiple addresses were targeted before the pre-dawn arrest closed the loop.

Anyone who believes they may be a victim connected to this case, or who has missing property that could be relevant, should contact the Nye County Sheriff's Office. Recovered property tied to an active arrest is typically held as evidence; claimants need documentation of ownership and may be required to wait until the case reaches resolution before retrieval is authorized.
What happens next: Green's case will advance to arraignment at Pahrump Justice Court, where a judge will formally present the charges and Green will enter a plea. The Nye County District Attorney's Office will then decide whether to adopt the charges as booked, modify the counts, or reduce them based on the available evidence. If the bond amounts are not adjusted at a hearing, Green would need to post across all individual holds before release. Court filings, once entered, are accessible through Pahrump Justice Court or by contacting the District Attorney's Office directly. As with all booking entries, the record reflects charges as logged at intake and carries no finding of guilt.
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