Chance Comanche, 27, who played for the Stockton Kings before his Dec. 15 arrest in Sacramento, arrived Sunday at the Clark County Detention Center.
Courts
Coverage from 2023 included stories on the anniversary of fellow reporter Jeff German’s murder and an investigation into a Nye County youth psychiatric facility.
Two more teenagers are facing charges as adults in connection with a September killing prosecutors have said was part of a larger gang crime spree.
UNLV confirmed Friday that the man who opened fire on campus and killed three professors earlier this month had applied to four positions at the university during a four-month period in 2019.
Christopher Hall, 51, faces a murder charge in the death of Rodrigo Maya Blanco.
District Judge Ronald Israel rejected pleas from Mohammed Mesmarian’s attorney to avoid time behind bars.
The Las Vegas Police Protective Association sued the Clark County Citizen Review Board to stop the names of officers facing complaints from becoming public.
A judge denied the Review-Journal’s anti-SLAPP motion to dismiss in the case surrounding video and photos of Henderson correctional officers.
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.
A criminal trial for the former owner of the Alpine Motel Apartments is not scheduled to start until February 2025, court records show.
Sakari Harnden and Chance Comanche both face charges of murder and conspiracy to commit murder in the death of 23-year-old Marayna Rodgers.
Since his arrest in September 2022, Robert Telles has gone through a series of attorneys, including firing his public defender for private attorneys.
Jesus Ayala’s public defender had filed a petition seeking the dismissal of an indictment charging Ayala with murder in the death of 66-year-old Andreas Probst.
Defense attorneys for Duane “Keffe D” Davis allege that his book outlining his involvement in the Tupac Shakur killing was written for financial and entertainment purposes.
The Clark County School District was ordered to release footage of an incident in which a police officer appears to push a Black student to the ground.