Workers in Nevada will see a bump in the state’s minimum wage this summer.
Politics and Government
Imprisoned for a fatal Las Vegas fatal DUI, former NFL player Henry Ruggs has been transferred to Northern Nevada, where he’s in a prison work program that placed him at the Governor’s Mansion.
The judge responded to a jury request by rereading 30 pages of jury instructions related to how inferences may be drawn from evidence.
Las Vegas’ budget has already taken a hit from one of the cases won by developer Yohan Lowie, whose stymied housing plans for a shuttered golf course led to extensive litigation.
The Review-Journal reached out to all mayoral candidates on how the city should pay for Badlands-related court rulings, and whether they agreed with the city’s yearslong legal battle.
Arrested again in Las Vegas and bound for California, one-time source Alexander Smirnov faces charges he lied to feds about Joe and Hunter Biden.
Republicans have a choice. The party need not turn its presidential primaries into a coronation.
The source who linked President Joe Biden’s son to Ukrainian energy company Burisma has a Tuesday federal court hearing in Las Vegas.
When there’s more money for Mexican cartels in human trafficking than in the drug trade, Washington should do more than point fingers.
Lech Walesa offered a warning for Americans who have felt invulnerable since the Cold War ended and buy into Donald Trump’s apparent belief that Putin can invade Eastern European countries without affecting us.
The president won’t be criminally charged for possessing and mishandling classified information — unlike Donald Trump — because of his frailty and senility.
Millions of migrants illegally enter the country. What’s a president to do? Blame the guy who’s running against him. How not to make law in Washington.
Voters overwhelmingly say they don’t want the “same old candidates.” Enter a wannabe from a political dynasty who’s been spending time at the border.
The campaign pledge. The executive orders. The unintended consequences. The finger pointing. The flip-flop.
Washington could deliver the first LGBTQ judge on the 4th Circuit and the first Muslim judge on any federal appeals court — and their first jobs on the bench.