Week in Review: Top News
April 10, 2011 - 1:00 am
Voters picked Carolyn Goodman and Chris Giunchigliani to square off in June for the right to become the next mayor of Las Vegas.
Buoyed by her popular term-limited husband, Oscar, Goodman cruised to an expected first-place finish in Tuesday's municipal primary, but Giunchigliani had to sweat out a 15-vote win over fellow Clark County Commissioner Larry Brown.
The drama was harder to find elsewhere.
Incumbent City Council members Ricki Barlow and Lois Tarkanian in Las Vegas, Debra March and Gerri Schroder in Henderson and Mayor Roger Tobler in Boulder City won re-election outright.
MONDAY
Standoff ends in death
Police shot and killed a man who entered a random apartment near Fremont Street and held a woman hostage for 12 hours.
The man, identified as Michael Dean Chevalier Jr., 48, had no known criminal record in Clark County, but he was convicted of manslaughter in Michigan in 1983, according to public records.
Police said Chevalier shot at a sedan he mistook for an undercover police vehicle and then fired at SWAT officers as they entered the apartment.
TUESDAY
Last call for Dotty's?
Clark County commissioners effectively put an end to the business model used by the Dotty's Gaming & Spirits operation, agreeing to changes in an ordinance that governs the operation of slot machines inside taverns.
Dotty's critics argued that the businesses were licensed as taverns but essentially operated as casinos.
Dotty's attorney Chris Kaempfer said after the hearing he expects the company will file a lawsuit in an attempt to overturn the changes.
WEDNESDAY
Stampede of elephants
Four months before Nevada's GOP presidential caucus, Republican White House hopefuls will debate in Las Vegas on Oct. 18 in a live televised forum hosted by CNN, organizers announced.
The event is sanctioned by the GOP as part of the Western Republican Leadership Conference, a four-day gathering of party leaders across the West and candidates competing for their nomination.
Nevada will be a big player in the 2012 White House sweepstakes as it holds the first early election campaign contest in the West on Feb. 18, after the Iowa caucus and the New Hampshire primary.
THURSDAY
Hello, 'health village'
A developer unveiled plans for a $1.5 billion Henderson "health village" to include a new St. Rose hospital.
The master plan for the Union Village project calls for medical, residential, entertainment, cultural arts and specialty retail space, as well as a senior retirement community, on 171 acres of city-owned land east of U.S. Highway 95 and north of Galleria Drive.
The developer called it "the first integrated health village in the world" and said it would create 17,000 jobs -- direct, indirect and during construction -- and generate billions of dollars in tax revenue.
FRIDAY
Institute slashes staff
Faced with $100 million in debt, the Nevada Cancer Institute laid off half of its 300-member staff.
The deep cuts at the Summerlin institute included researchers, doctors, nurses and administrative staff.
But patients currently in treatment at the institute will not be affected, according to Michael Yackira, chairman of the institute's board of directors.
Week In Review
More Information
NUMBERS
$182.26
The amount spent per vote by mayoral candidate Victor Chaltiel, based on his March 24 filing that showed him spending $1,232,623.73 by that date. He got 6,763 votes.
$29.24
The amount spent per vote by Carolyn Goodman, the first-place finisher in the Las Vegas mayoral primary.
328-328
Tie between North Las Vegas City Council candidates Tanya Flanagan and Linda Meisenheimer, who may draw cards to decide who advances to the general election.
18 percent
The percentage of eligible voters who cast ballots in Tuesday’s election. Turnout ranged from 51 percent in Mesquite to just over 9 percent in North Las Vegas.
QUOTES
“Wow. Don’t tell me this is not a history lesson to everyone in the room — that every vote counts.”
Chris Giunchigliani
After learning that she beat fellow Clark County Commissioner Larry Brown by 15 votes to advance to the June 7 general election in the Las Vegas mayoral race.
“We want justice, and we want it swiftly.”
Ron Portaro
who wore his nephew Michael’s high school varsity jacket on Wednesday as he asked for the public’s help in solving the March 30 slaying of the 22-year-old aspiring rapper.
“This program has got great tradition, so we’re not rebuilding. We’re not bringing it back.”
Lon Kruger
Talking about Oklahoma — not UNLV — after being introduced as the Sooners’ new coach on Monday. Unlike the Rebels, Oklahoma has never won a national championship in basketball.
“They don’t even rattle anymore.”
Biologist Bryan Hamilton
Talking about nine rattlesnakes he and his staff check in on every two weeks at Great Basin national park. The rattlers have been surgically implanted with tracking devices to study their behavior.
MULTIMEDIA
lvrj.com/multimedia
• VIDEO: Doug Elfman: What’s Hot This Weekend 04/08/11
• SLIDE SHOW: Frank “Lefty” Rosenthal’s former home retains mobster trappings
• VIDEO: Impact Nevada: Medical marijuana
• SLIDE SHOW: Voting day in the Las Vegas valley
• VIDEO: Police shoot and kill suspect, ending standoff in downtown Las Vegas area
• VIDEO: Movie Minute with Carol Cling 04/08/11
• VIDEO: Rattlesnakes square off for mating rights