SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. — A significant legal development has emerged involving local governance in El Dorado County’s Tahoe Basin: On the evening of Sept. 25 and into the early hours of Sept. 26, Cody Bass, who currently serves as Interim Mayor of the City of South Lake Tahoe, was arrested by the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office in Stateline, Nevada.
Timeline & Key Facts
-
Shortly before midnight on Sept. 25, deputies responded to a call at the establishment Lake Tahoe AleWorx in Stateline, Nevada, reporting an altercation between Bass and a bouncer or security attendant at the venue.
-
Bass had earlier contacted law-enforcement, claiming he had been kicked by a doorman.
-
According to court reports and surveillance footage reviewed by deputies, Bass approached the employee, left, and returned about 20 minutes later, where he allegedly cocked his arm as if to strike the employee. The employee then kicked Bass in self-defense. Arrest documents list Bass as the aggressor in the incident.
-
Bass was booked, posted bond of approximately $1,978, and was released around 4:35 a.m. on Sept. 26.
-
On Oct. 2, the Douglas County District Attorney’s Office filed a criminal complaint charging Bass with misdemeanor trespassing and harassment; notably, the initial assault charge was dropped by the DA.
-
Bass is scheduled to appear in Tahoe Justice Court on Dec. 22 for arraignment.
Stakeholders & Context
-
Cody Bass is currently Interim Mayor of South Lake Tahoe; under California law, his council seat would become vacant only if he were convicted of a felony or entered a felony plea, not for misdemeanors. City Attorney Heather Stroud has confirmed this technicality.
-
The City of South Lake Tahoe has issued a statement acknowledging the arrest and saying the matter is being handled by Douglas County authorities. The city said it has “no further comment at this time.”
-
Residents of El Dorado County and surrounding communities have an interest because the political stability of South Lake Tahoe and its leadership affects regional cooperation, tourism, and municipal services.
Surveillance Footage Undercuts Assault Claim in Stateline Arrest of South Lake Tahoe Official
By Cris Alarcon | News InEDC
STATELINE, Nev. — The confrontation began like a hundred others that spill out of Lake Tahoe’s late-night scene — a dispute at the door, a call to the cops, a claim of assault. But this one ended with an elected official in handcuffs.
Shortly after midnight on Sept. 26, South Lake Tahoe Mayor Pro Tem Cody Bass called deputies from the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, reporting that a bar doorman had kicked him without cause. When officers arrived, Bass — visibly upset but cooperative — told them he’d been attacked outside the popular AleWorx taproom in Stateline.
“I was standing right here,” Bass told one deputy, gesturing toward the sidewalk, according to body-camera footage later released to reporters. “The guy comes out and just kicks me, unprovoked.”
Officers listened as Bass insisted he was the victim of an assault and should not have been trespassed from the property. “It’s not his business,” he said, referring to the doorman. “He doesn’t own it.”
The deputy noted there was a prior trespass notice on file, to which Bass responded flatly, “That’s not valid. They can’t do that.”
Bass went on to accuse the employee — identified by witnesses as “Bobby,” a well-known door attendant in the casino corridor — of being violent with other patrons. “He’s kicked out plenty of people,” Bass said. “It’s just a matter of time before he hurts somebody.”
After taking Bass’s statement, deputies walked into the bar to review surveillance footage. What they saw changed everything.
“The video doesn’t lie,” one officer later told Bass on camera. “You walked up, you squared off, and you cocked your arm like you were going to hit him.”
The footage, deputies said, showed Bass approaching the doorway twice that night — once earlier in the evening after being told to leave, and again roughly twenty minutes later. On the second approach, he appeared agitated. When he raised his arm, the doorman responded with a defensive kick.
To the deputies, that was enough to flip the narrative.
“We’re going to have to place you under arrest for assault and trespassing,” the officer said calmly.
Bass protested. “You’re making a mistake,” he replied, maintaining that he had been assaulted first.
“I’ve done nothing wrong,” he said repeatedly as handcuffs clicked into place.
He was booked into Douglas County Jail and released on a $1,978 bond. The Douglas County District Attorney later filed misdemeanor charges of trespassing and harassment, dropping the original assault count after reviewing the evidence.
Bass, who is serving his second term on the South Lake Tahoe City Council, has publicly denied wrongdoing. “On the evening in question, I was assaulted for the second time by the doorman at AleWorx,” he wrote in a Facebook statement. “Despite my testimony, the deputy chose to place me under a citizen’s arrest. I will absolutely not be stepping down from my position.”
The City of South Lake Tahoe acknowledged the arrest in a brief statement, noting that the case is under the jurisdiction of Nevada authorities and that city officials have “no further comment at this time.”
Under California law, misdemeanor charges do not disqualify an elected official from serving, so Bass remains in office as Mayor Pro Tem while awaiting arraignment, scheduled for Dec. 22 in Tahoe Justice Court.
The incident has stirred conversation across the South Shore about accountability and public conduct. Some residents have voiced support, suggesting Bass was unfairly targeted because of his political visibility; others argue that elected leaders must be held to the same legal standards as everyone else.
In the end, the case may hinge on a few seconds of grainy surveillance video — and on how a court interprets a single movement of the hand in the flickering light outside a Tahoe bar.
Quote from Bass
In a public statement via Facebook, Bass asserted his innocence, writing:
“On the evening in question, I was assaulted for the second time by the doorman at AleWorx … Despite my testimony … the deputy chose to place me under a citizen’s arrest … I will absolutely not be stepping down from my position on the City Council, as I have done nothing wrong.”
Impact for El Dorado County & Local Readers
For local readers in El Dorado County, this incident raises several considerations:
-
-
Trust in local governance: An elected official facing criminal allegations, even misdemeanors, can shake confidence in municipal leadership, especially in a predominantly tourist-driven economy like South Lake Tahoe’s.
-
-
Inter-jurisdictional implications: The arrest occurred in Nevada, but the individual serves in California; this cross-state legal scenario may complicate timing, jurisdictional oversight and public transparency.
-
Future governance risk: Should additional revelations or legal outcomes emerge, the continuity of city leadership—council actions, policy decisions—may be affected, with ripple effects into the broader basin, including for El Dorado County.
-
Media and public scrutiny: The story comes amid other leadership controversies in South Lake Tahoe, intensifying media and public attention on City Council seats and transparency.
What to Watch
-
The outcome of the December 22 arraignment: whether Bass pleads no contest, fights the charges, or settles.
-
Any motions or resignations within the City Council if additional charges or public pressure accumulate.
-
How local constituents and business interests respond, particularly tourism and hospitality sectors, which often rely on stable and trusted municipal leadership.
-
Possible policy ramifications or shifts in city governance if leadership is challenged or distracted by legal matters.







