Cary Katz, a Las Vegas billionaire and one of the state’s largest Republican political donors, has sued an arm of Conservative Review over a $20 million loan.
David Ferrara
David Ferrara covers courts and legal affairs. He joined the newspaper in 2014 after more than six years reporting in the Deep South, where he wrote extensively about the BP oil spill. Prior to that, he worked for newspapers, magazines and a wire service in Chicago. He is a graduate of Southern Illinois University in Carbondale.
A Las Vegas medical practice agreed to pay $1.5 million to the federal government to resolve five years of alleged false billing, the Department of Justice announced Friday.
Two men were convicted of attempted murder Friday for their roles in the shooting of a Las Vegas police officer nearly three years ago.
The Las Vegas legal community will remember longtime criminal defense attorney John Momot this weekend.
Illusionist David Copperfield returned to a Las Vegas witness stand Tuesday, testifying about a performance in which an audience member was injured.
A father-son duo from Las Vegas pleaded guilty Monday in federal court to robbing six smoke shops and two credit unions in early 2017.
Copperfield’s court-ordered revelation of his “Lucky #13” illusion came in a civil trial over an audience member’s slip and fall during a Las Vegas show in 2013.
A British tourist suing illusionist David Copperfield over a slip and fall during one of his Las Vegas shows told the executive producer that he was OK moments after he injured his shoulder, according to testimony Tuesday.
Longtime criminal defense attorney John Momot, who represented mob figures and even played himself in the movie “Casino,” has died. He was 74.
Prosecutors say a former Las Vegas casino executive used nearly $400,000 in hotel advertising dollars to promote her romance novel.
David Copperfield has taken his “Lucky #13” illusion around the world, but for one British tourist who traveled to Las Vegas to see the magician, lawyers say the trick ended with injury.
Former Las Vegas casino mogul Steve Wynn has filed a defamation lawsuit against The Associated Press and others for what his attorneys described as “false accusations of rape.”
A Las Vegas felon whose neo-Nazi tattoos drew international attention pleaded guilty Wednesday to first-degree murder for killing a 75-year-old woman.
Prosecutors will not seek capital punishment for a former Las Vegas police officer charged in a woman’s 1997 shooting death.
A 28-year-old man was sent to prison Tuesday for a punch-and-fall death outside a downtown Las Vegas lounge.