The majority of schools offering in-person classes starting this month are restricting visitor and parent access due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Local Las Vegas
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The horrors of that fateful day “rested on his shoulder” for a lifetime, Nielsen told the Review-Journal in December. He died on Sunday, his daughter announced.
The coronavirus is estimated to be the third-leading cause of death in the U.S., and its ranking in the state could rise as the year progresses.
A 32-year-old man killed by police was shot at a dozen times by officers Monday after holding his mother hostage and threatening to set her mobile home on fire, according to Las Vegas police.
If anyone has information, call Metro at 702-828-3111, its Missing Persons Detail at 702-828-2907 or Nevada Child Seekers at 702-458-7009.
The Clark County coroner’s office has identified the man killed in a central Las Vegas gunfight early Friday morning.
Attorney William Schuller is demanding that he and two others be reimbursed for the tickets and the fun they would have had watching football games at Allegiant Stadium.
The Clark County coroner’s office said the death of a homeless man whose body was found in July on the side of the road was accidental.
The city of Las Vegas opened registration Wednesday for Vegas Strong Academy, its child care option at six community centers that will support distance learning through the fall semester.
Appointments are still required for the majority of transactions, and motorists can book the new appointment times by the end of the week.
Clark County School District parents protested at the district’s administration building on Wednesday, saying they feel shut out of the conversation around reopening schools.
The victim told detectives he was headed to Arizona to buy a house when he stopped in Las Vegas on July 4.
Las Vegas’ mortgage delinquency rate rose again in May after the coronavirus pandemic shut down much of the economy, a new report shows.
An excessive heat warning begins Friday for Clark County except higher elevations as well as southern Nye County and northwest Arizona, the National Weather service said.
LVCVA executives found there would be no financial advantage to extending the completion date of the $980.3 million project, so it will be finished as planned.