The Nevada Highway Patrol needs the public’s help finding the driver involved in a hit-and-run crash that left a pedestrian dead early Sunday in the southwest Las Vegas Valley.
Southwest
Abie Garcia, 62, was hospitalized Jan. 31 when he was hit by a truck at the intersection of West Bell Road and South Decatur Boulevard, police said. He died March 28.
The Clark County coroner’s office has identified a man killed Monday morning at a southwest Las Vegas Valley construction site.
Faith-based police partners want people to know there are opportunities to help others and themselves.
The Metropolitan Police Department received reports at about 9:50 a.m. at a construction site at 9750 W. Sunset Road, near South Grand Canyon Drive.
The Charleston Heights Arts Center looks like a million dollars.
Dee Wirth knows what it’s like to live on the street. She knows what it’s like to struggle with drugs and alcohol and feel powerless to change that. She also knows what it’s like to survive, recover and fight addiction with a vengeance.
No one was was injured Monday morning after three inmates threatened guards and tried to tip over a prisoner transport van in the southwest valley.
State and county officials plan to begin work April 2 to back-fill several dozen abandoned mine shafts peppering the future park site on county-owned land west of Fort Apache and Warm Springs roads.
Sou Ngo had no choice on a recent Monday but to turn away loyal customers.
The identity has been released of the 14-year-old boy killed Wednesday when an SUV struck him near Desert Breeze Park.
As an influx of professional sports teams begins to reshape tourism in the Las Vegas Valley, Clark County plans to harness America’s Pastime to attract even more fans for college and high school teams.
At about 11:40 a.m., emergency personnel with Clark County and Las Vegas fire departments responded to reports of a propane leak near West Flamingo Road and El Capitan Way.
Starting in early April, crews will begin back-filling at least 40 mine shafts at a long-abandoned gypsum mine on county-owned land near Fort Apache and Warm Springs roads.
Of Nevada’s 58 dispensaries, one is African-American-owned, according to the Las Vegas Medical Marijuana Association. While about 47 percent of industry employees are minorities, said Kema Ogden of Top Notch THC, there is work to be done.