A coalition of UNLV students and community organizers decried gun violence Tuesday morning near the site of a campus shooting that killed three professors last year.
Ricardo Torres-Cortez
Ricardo Torres-Cortez covers the city of Las Vegas and Clark County. He returned to the Review-Journal, where he’d interned, after a five-year stint at the Las Vegas Sun newspaper. A Mexican-born graduate of UNLV, he’s passionate about soccer, video games, books and coffee.
A Clark County School District substitute teacher accused of handing a student inappropriate notes reportedly admitted he was infatuated with her.
The Clark County coroner’s office released the name of a person found dead Monday at a northwest Las Vegas golf course.
A Jewish student with autism, who returned home from school with an apparent swastika carved into his back, hasn’t received an adequate education, his attorneys allege.
Don’t let weather conditions, a traffic jam or a safety oversight ruin a jolly holiday road trip.
Two private ambulance companies that operate within the city of Las Vegas will continue to do so after they received contract extensions this month.
The person who’d most been looking forward to Tuesday’s sentencing hearing didn’t live long enough to see justice for her son.
As municipalities race to keep up with the growing demand for public pickleball courts, the city of Las Vegas is planning a 32-court complex in the northwest.
The Animal Foundation pitched Clark County commissioners on a call center proposal it says would improve its customer service.
A judge said portions of the Clark County ordinance were vague and subjected homeowners to intrusive inspections. The county says it can still issue licenses.
The Nevada Department of Corrections says it is temporarily shutting down the facility and shifting employees to understaffed sites.
The city of Las Vegas on Wednesday approved an agreement with the operators of the Strat to build a pedestrian view deck along a Las Vegas Boulevard sidewalk.
Cannabis consumption lounges are coming to the city of Las Vegas.
A man accused of triggering false reports of an active shooter throughout the tourist corridor had been upset for being kicked out of a Strip property, police alleged in his arrest report.
In an Air Force town, a nondescript two-story building in south Las Vegas serves as the headquarters for an Army recruiting unit breaking barriers.