Anthony Chiaramonti, 40, was killed along with three others in a crash above North Las Vegas Airport in July.
Courts
Gregory “Brent” Dennis pleaded guilty in January to voluntary manslaughter for killing his wife, whose death initially was ruled a suicide.
Caleb Rogers, 33, has been charged locally and federally in connection to three armed robberies of local casinos.
A trial in the civil case between Hogs & Heifers Saloon and its landlord, the Downtown Grand, kicked off Monday with testimony from the bar’s owner.
A pair of Las Vegas men accused in the theft of 240 pounds of commercial-grade explosives from a Southern Nevada mining business are facing federal charges.
The driver of an SUV that fatally struck two 16-year-old Las Vegas girls was ordered held without bail on Monday.
A trial over new marijuana shop licenses is set to take place at the Las Vegas Convention Center because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Adolfo Orozco’s attorney argued for the cellphone to be returned and any future search be limited to the deadly December fire. A judge Tuesday sided with police.
Lawyers for real estate broker Scott Gragson, charged in a DUI crash that left a woman dead and others injured, want his blood alcohol test thrown out.
Two Las Vegas residents were sentenced to prison Wednesday for filing false tax returns in an attempt to receive millions of dollars in fraudulent refunds.
The mother of a 31-year-old man killed by Las Vegas police in a hospital emergency room has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Metropolitan Police Department.
An Arizona man who sold bullets to the Oct. 1 gunman was excused from his Las Vegas arraignment Monday, and his lawyer entered a not-guilty plea on his behalf.
Officer James Lescinsky, who was acquitted in a federal excessive force case in 2016, alleges that a tainted investigation left him branded as a liar and leaves him with no prospect of finding new employment.
A Las Vegas judge should not have denied the prison system’s planned use of a paralytic drug to execute a death row inmate, the Nevada Supreme Court ruled Thursday.
A Las Vegas man authorities said idolized the Route 91 Harvest festival mass shooter pleaded guilty but mentally ill to a bomb-threat charge Thursday.