One of the teens accused in the death of a retired police chief has been indicted on a count of battery by a prisoner motivated by bias or hatred, prosecutors said.
Courts
The filing follows an unusual degree of secrecy in the case, including a plea agreement that experts said a judge improperly sealed.
Patrick Odale was pronounced dead at Southern Desert Correctional Center on Dec. 28, 2023. The Clark County coroner’s office ruled that he died by “positional and mechanical asphyxia in the setting of law enforcement restraint.”
Authorities said Jesus Robles was driving an unregistered Chevrolet Tahoe north on Jones Boulevard when he hit James McCoy Jr., 63.
One judge kicked the public out of his courtroom without explanation and attempted to hold a secret hearing; another improperly sealed a plea, according to experts.
Margaret Rudin filed her lawsuit against the state in May 2024, seeking a certificate of innocence and wrongful conviction compensation.
A Review-Journal investigation has revealed that several Clark County judges have failed to report sponsored trips to conservative-backed educational workshops.
Two residents who live near the site of an approved housing and resource facility want to stop construction while officials consider alternate sites, according to a lawsuit.
Rachel Chapman filed the lawsuit on behalf of her child, listed as B.H., against the Clark County School District and Adrian Krosnick, her son’s former speech language pathologist.
Prosecutors have said Duane “Keffe D” Davis orchestrated a plan to pay back the hip hop star and Death Row Records CEO Marion “Suge” Knight.
Court and Metropolitan Police Department arrest records indicate that 28-year-old Alexis Herrera faces one count of theft.
Manuel Ruiz has been accused in the shooting in front of the Bellagio that claimed the lives of Rodney Finley and Tanisha Finley.
He made the comment just days after an attorney committed a fatal shooting at a law office in Summerlin during a deposition.
A press release from the Alaska U.S. Attorney’s Office stated that 37-year-olds Helmut Mey and Jonhatan Lau-Osuna conspired with each other to distribute and possess with intent to distribute fentanyl in Alaska.
Aerion Warmsley could face the death penalty because of aggravating factors and the “mass destruction” a prosecutor said he left in his wake.
