The “Decide to Ride” drunk driving prevention campaign launches Wednesday in Clark County.
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Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo presented statistics on violent crime, property crime and traffic fatalities, which were all on the rise last year.
It’s Super Bowl time and there are many places in the Las Vegas Valley to cheer on either the Cincinnati Bengals or the Los Angeles Rams.
The family of a woman who died from a drug overdose after attending a party with North Las Vegas firefighters has filed a lawsuit against the city, its fire department and others.
Following release from a Nevada prison in 2010 on charges stemming from the mysterious death of Ted Binion, the Montana businessman has spent a decade remaking his past.
An ER travel nurse from Chicago has shared her time working in a Las Vegas hospital amid the COVID-19 variant, omicron, through the popular social media app TikTok.
President Joe Biden on Thursday affirmed his pledge to nominate the first Black woman to the U.S. Supreme Court, saying it was “long overdue.”
Graciela Gomez died at a party on the 200 block of Beesley Drive when someone fired multiple gunshots into the house, striking her in the abdomen.
An officer is on the long road to recovery after he was struck during a shootout, police said Thursday.
Golden Knights center Jack Eichel, acquired in November from the Buffalo Sabres, still has hurdles to clear before playing in his first NHL game since March 7.
The Metropolitan Police Department on Monday provided an update on a police shooting that killed a suspected burglar Thursday in southeast Las Vegas.
A woman who pushed a 74-year-old man off a bus in March 2019, causing his death, has pleaded guilty to an abuse charge.
Lawyers for the former Raiders wide receiver updated a judge on Thursday morning on the status of the case.
President Biden on Thursday delivered what he declared was the “God’s truth” marking the anniversary of the U.S. Capitol insurrection, the violent attack by Donald Trump’s supporters that raised global concerns about the future of American democracy.
Attorney General Merrick Garland on Wednesday vowed to hold accountable anyone who was responsible for last year’s insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, whether they were physically there or not.