Greg Zanis placed 58 crosses near the “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign Monday night, an unexpected move after Clark County requested a change of venue.
mc-local
The Clark County Fire Department said no one was injured after two patio chairs caught fire on the fourth floor balcony of an apartment complex near the Las Vegas Convention Center.
Investigators say the 60-year-old man and 55-year-old woman were from Tennessee.
Crews were called around 12:50 p.m. to the business complex northeast of Texas Station.
The Clark County coroner said Wednesday that his office has not determined the cause of death of the woman whose body was found in Lake Mead on Sept. 1.
North Las Vegas police have a new assistant chief, the city announced Monday. Jacqueline Gravatt will take over the position.
Nearly two years after being shot at the Route 91 Harvest festival, Luca Iclodean set out to face his fear of working another major music festival.
Beginning Oct. 1, 2020, Real IDs, a new form of ID card, will be the only version accepted to use as identification to board a plane for a domestic flight.
When two Las Vegas police officers met Jovanna Calzadillas on Oct. 1, 2017, she was a lifeless body in the arms of her husband. The rush to save her was on.
The boy was admitted in critical condition on Sept. 18 after a parent brought him to a local emergency room in “physical distress.”
The flu vaccine is available at the Southern Nevada Health District’s immunization clinics as well as community clinics and pharmacies throughout the Las Vegas Valley.
Las Vegas police responded just after 10 a.m. Monday to reports of a crash at Desert Inn Road and Polaris Avenue, just west of Interstate 15.
“It’s impossible to know how you’ll react when faced with your own mortality,” says Shannon Zeeman, a survivor of the Oct. 1, 2017, shooting.
Nevadans have a new way to raise funds for those affected by the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting while displaying pride in the community that rallied after the tragedy.
Two years after the Las Vegas attack, Strip resorts are still dotted with dead zones that make it impossible for first responders to communicate on their radios.