Tattoo artists from all over the country donated their time and skills to cover survivors’ physical, mental or emotional wounds through tattooing.
Local Las Vegas
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Gov. Steve Sisolak issued a proclamation making Oct. 1 “Vegas Strong Day in Nevada” and ordered that all Nevada flags be flown at half-staff at all public buildings.
Norwich University, the oldest private military college in the country, is honoring victims of the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting in its Corps of Cadets class ring.
Regulations laid out on Lee Canyon’s website include face masks, social distancing and limiting the daily number of guests at the Mount Charleston ski and snowboard resort.
A Las Vegas lawyer, recently charged with writing bad checks, told police in 2017 that he used cocaine with a woman who died of an overdose and never reported her death.
The Clark County School District could see a vote in late October on reopening schools, but only if public health conditions allow it, school board members said this week.
The Vegas Strong Resiliency Center, which opened after the mass shooting, moved into a new space in January. But since the pandemic, everything has shifted online.
Three years later, the Vegas Strong Resiliency Center still interacts with those affected by the mass shooting on a daily basis.
Two people suffered minor smoke inhalation injuries in a fire on a second-story apartment balcony in central Las Vegas early Wednesday.
Las Vegas police are investigating a fatal auto-pedestrian crash in the north valley early Wednesday.
Officers were called at 7:19 p.m. to the entrance to an apartment complex on South Pecos Road, where a motorcycle and a sedan had collided, Las Vegas police said.
Universal Health Services, which operates six hospitals in the Las Vegas Valley, said Tuesday that its computer networks remained shut down after a cyberattack.
Michelle Cox filed a lawsuit Friday in U.S. District Court, alleging the district and two Garehime Elementary administrators failed to take adequate action after a classmate allegedly harrased and threatened her daughter.
The Public Education Foundation announced Tuesday a new college scholarship for the children of those killed in the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting three years ago.
A sculpture to honor Oct. 1 shooting victims apparently has stalled.