For the second time in six months, Wayne Newton is facing a lawsuit that accuses his pet monkey of attacking someone during a tour of his home.
Local Las Vegas
Las Vegas breaking news from Nevada's most reliable source. Read about the latest updates happening in Las Vegas at reviewjournal.com.
A Las Vegas psychiatric hospital at the center of a lawsuit over the death of a 6-year-old boy disputes a claim that the child’s mother was treated at the facility.
A Las Vegas poker pro filed a federal lawsuit this weekend alleging that another player used hidden devices to cheat her out of thousands of dollars in a game broadcast from a California casino.
Relatives of two men killed at the hands of Metropolitan Police Department officers have filed separate civil rights lawsuits in federal court.
A Las Vegas law firm filed a class-action lawsuit against China over the coronavirus outbreak, alleging that the country tried to cover up the severity of the virus.
Las Vegas Justice Court and Municipal Court traffic customer service counters were closed Tuesday in yet another effort to stave off the spread of the new coronavirus.
Efforts to enforce social distancing slowed entrance to the Regional Justice Center on Tuesday, despite a monthlong suspension of jury trials.
A judge on Friday signed off on a step toward paying thousands of victims of the Route 91 Harvest festival massacre.
The incident occurred when the dentist was placing crowns on a 5-year-old Las Vegas girl’s teeth and a spark from a drill ignited packing in her mouth, the complaint says.
Marwan Porter, an attorney for the family of Cynthia Mikell, 61 told reporters that The Cochran Firm has launched its own investigation into the fire.
A man jolted from a toilet and injured after a tour bus slammed into a rest stop near Valley of Fire State Park has filed a lawsuit in Las Vegas.
The Clark County coroner should not be able to keep certain autopsy reports confidential, a lawyer for the Review-Journal argued before the Nevada Supreme Court.
Nevada officials should have conducted more thorough background checks on potential pot companies before handing out a round of dispensary licenses, a judge ruled Friday.
German “OT” Ortiz lived in Las Vegas for a decade without knowing that a 57-inch metal wire ran through his body.