Telephone scammers have been disguising their phone numbers by using the Metropolitan Police Department’s “828” prefix number in order to solicit or scam victims in the Las Vegas Valley, the department said Tuesday.
North Las Vegas
North Las Vegas police officers shot and killed a man Monday night after responding to a report of unspecified criminal activity, police said.
The Regional Transportation Commission is offering free bus rides to furloughed federal employees during the partial government shutdown.
Students at Scott Elementary School in North Las Vegas are allowed to deposit money into bank accounts via a program called Save at School.
More than 100 friends and family gathered Saturday to remember 18-year-old Kwavon’tia Gregory Thomas of Las Vegas, who was fatally shot in North Las Vegas on Christmas Eve.
Of the more than 4,300 deaths investigated by the Clark County coroner’s office in 2018, 36 were ruled undetermined, meaning the manner of death could not be nailed down.
Hiring teachers in Clark County is hard, but hiring a diverse pool of educators that mirrors the student population in the Las Vegas Valley is even more difficult.
After an arrest was made in the fatal shooting of 16-year-old Aneas David King in North Las Vegas, a candlelight vigil for the boy ended in yelling and heated emotions Thursday night.
Cassandra Lewis of North Las Vegas remembers walking on the streets of the Historic Westside decades ago to the only store on that side of town.
North Las Vegas is offering utility payment deferrals to federal workers affected by the ongoing government shutdown, officials announced Monday.
Though his tempestuous time on the School Board ends Monday, Kevin Child will continue to do battle with the Clark County School District through his ongoing lawsuit.
Last year was the deadliest on record for two Clark County suburbs, while Las Vegas police saw a drop in homicides for the first time since 2012.
A 77-year-old man with dementia was found Saturday morning about 3 miles from where he was last seen Friday.
Nedra Cooper was a 17-year-old “military brat” and a senior in high school when she settled in the Las Vegas Valley in 1971, after traveling with her father from base to base.
The 20-day enforcement period began Wednesday and lasts until Jan. 22 as part of the multijurisdictional Joining Forces program through the Nevada Department of Public Safety’s Office of Traffic Safety.