Bradley Bellisario faces criminal charges, but it’s allegations that he bilked clients out of more than $260,000 that could cost him his law license.
Courts
Victims of the deadliest residential fire in Las Vegas history still suffer from PTSD, long-lasting injuries and struggle to make a living while court case drags on.
A student who says he is immune from COVID-19 because he already had it is suing the University of Nevada, Reno, the governor and others over the state’s vaccine requirement.
Critics decried Metro’s actions as non-transparent and contrary to Sheriff Joe Lombardo’s stance that his department focuses on helping ICE capture, deport violent offenders.
Relatives of a woman who died when she was intentionally knocked off her bicycle expressed anger Thursday after a man involved in the crash did not show up to his sentencing hearing.
A Las Vegas man is facing a murder charge after police said a witness and several cameras linked him to a fatal shooting, according to an arrest report released Tuesday.
A convicted sex offender and his brother made video court appearances Tuesday after being indicted on kidnapping and sexual assault charges involving a 13-year-old girl.
A group of Las Vegas police detectives was being honored Thursday for work that helped uncover a potential terrorism plot at a northwest valley home in September 2020.
Masks are again required inside the Regional Justice Center, according to an administrative order filed Monday that immediately took effect.
A Las Vegas man has been sentenced for voting twice in the 2016 general election, the Nevada Attorney General’s Office announced Monday.
“Joshua Honea has finally gotten his life back. He has been in legal limbo,” his attorney, Jonathan MacArthur, said in a text message Monday.
The deal protects the defendants from prison time and reduced a long list of felony counts to a handful of charges typically reserved for minor crimes.
A judge outside Las Vegas rejected a bid for a new trial Wednesday from a convicted felon who alleged widespread corruption within Clark County’s justice system.
A former officer with the Metropolitan Police Department who admitted to stealing from a police dog fundraiser was ordered to pay thousands of dollars Wednesday and serve up to three years probation.
Marcel and Patricia Chappuis originally faced 45 counts each of child abuse or neglect — a felony punishable by up to 20 years in prison.