The DUI suspect had double the blood alcohol level allowed to legally drive hours after the collision, a Clark County prosecutor said.
Courts
A man will serve up to 40 years in prison for a DUI crash that killed two pedestrians in North Las Vegas a year ago.
Attorneys argued whether the NFL can force former Raiders coach Jon Gruden into an arbitration process outside of court.
Criss Angel was performing his magic show when a fan allegedly punched a security officer, but the fan and his attorney claim Angel came over and “choked” him.
Duane “Keffe D” Davis, a 60-year-old reputed member of the South Side Crips, has been held at the Clark County Detention Center since he was indicted in September.
Police say a man’s desire to “protect his family” was the motive behind a Dec. 1 shooting in east Las Vegas that left two homeless people dead.
Deobra Redden was back in court with six uniformed officers. He wore restraint gloves, and a full face mask he wore at previous hearings was replaced with a surgical mask.
A middle school teacher had been charged with disturbing the peace after he was removed by police from a Clark County School Board meeting.
A man accused of attacking a Las Vegas judge appeared in front of her again to continue last week’s derailed sentencing hearing. He now faces an attempted murder charge in connection to the attack.
Meng Zhong was named the pro bono attorney of the year in 2023 by the Legal Aid Center of Southern Nevada.
A Las Vegas judge ordered a man and a woman accused of killing two homeless men to remain in custody without bail, but said attorneys can present bail arguments at a later hearing.
Deobra Redden told police District Judge Mary Kay Holthus was “evil” and “had it out for him,” after he launched himself at the judge, according to an arrest report.
In addition to the prison sentence, United States District Judge Andrew P. Gordon ordered Gil to serve three years of supervised release and to pay $2,228,943.65 in restitution.
A man seen in a video violently launching himself at a Las Vegas judge will remain in custody with a $54,000 bond.
Release of the sealed court documents could finally bring to rest years of speculation about who among the rich and powerful were participants in the Palm Beach resident’s sordid world of sexual abuse.