The law firm of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck has formed a crisis management group led by shareholder Mitch Langberg and Chief Culture and Communications Officer Lara Day.
mc-business
CarParts.com is the latest company to choose Southern Nevada for a distribution center, joining firms such as Smith’s Food and Drug Stores and Amazon.com.
A bill cracking down on deceptive hotel resort fees by requiring full disclosure of pricing in advertising was introduced Thursday in the House.
Las Vegas Sands Corp. will replace biopharmaceutical company Nektar Therapeutics on the index prior to U.S. markets opening on Thursday.
601 Fremont LLC plans a mixed-use tower with hotel units, residential units, entertainment, retail space and restaurant and bar facilities in downtown Las Vegas.
Executives at the company “mentally abuse” the therapist, who said she was forced to perform sex acts on Steve Wynn from 2012 to 2016
Thousands of origami Japanese maple leaves billow above the Aria’s main lobby to celebrate the turn of the season.
The Raiders could pay Clark County $1.1 million per year to lease two lots to enhance parking operations tied to the $2 billion 65,000 fan capacity Allegiant Stadium.
Golden Nugget owner, aquarium and theme park operator, restaurant entrepreneur, reality TV star Tilman Feritta has a new accomplishment: business book author.
Federal agents took down an alleged Medicare scam Friday that exploited seniors’ curiosity about genetic medicine by enticing them to get their cheeks swabbed for unneeded DNA tests.
The Las Vegas Strip paced statewide gaming win in August with improved totals in table games, slot machines and sports wagering, the Gaming Control Board reported Friday.
Wells Fargo named its third CEO in as many years as the bank attempts to put behind it a series of recent scandals.
Representatives of the Nevada Gaming Commission still have policy decisions ahead of them over new rules about children participating in fundraising raffles.
The Pennsylvania-based gaming company operates the Tropicana Las Vegas and M Resort
The Nevada Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Title Max broke state law by offering loans twice as long as state law allows, thus overcharging customers, but the company won’t have to pay damages because it didn’t willfully violate the law.