The signs are intended to raise awareness during the holiday season.
Brett Clarkson

Brett Clarkson was born and raised in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada and graduated from Humber College's journalism program in 2002. He has lived in various places including Toronto, Los Angeles, South Florida, Northern Virginia, and now, Las Vegas. Before joining the Review-Journal in 2022 he worked at the Niagara Falls Review, Toronto Sun, and South Florida Sun Sentinel, contributing to the Sun Sentinel's coverage of the 2018 Parkland shooting, which earned the paper the Pulitzer Prize Gold Medal For Public Service. He is the father of two children and has a dog named Julio.
After the successful sex trafficking crackdown last week, Las Vegas police said plans to combat sex trafficking during the Super Bowl will be announced soon.
After he was pulled over by police, Roderic Teamer told officers he was speeding because he was a Las Vegas Raiders player and wanted to make the team’s curfew, according to an arrest report.
A 25-year-old man charged in a Lake Las Vegas fatal shooting told police that the victim had raped him, according to a Henderson Police Department arrest report released Monday.
The backup of post-holiday traffic on the southbound Interstate 15 heading out of Las Vegas to California is an annual tradition for drivers.
The killing happened in the 3800 block of East Charleston Boulevard, Metro said.
David Chesnoff, a prominent defense attorney, spent several days working at the largest hospital in Israel because he wanted to help during the war with Hamas.
Reports detail allegations against four of eight teens arrested in the fatal mob beating of Jonathan Lewis Jr., a Rancho High School student.
A vigil organized by a controversial group that bills itself as a parents’ rights organization will honor a high school student who police say was fatally beaten.
Las Vegas’ airport on Sunday was a scene of satisfied travelers but also delayed flights.
Earthquake experts warn that Nevadans should be prepared for one.
Lawyers for the Las Vegas Review-Journal are discussing the agreement with Las Vegas police and prosecutors.
Eight teens between the ages of 13 and 17 have been arrested in the video-recorded fatal mob beating of a 17-year-old Rancho High School student, Las Vegas police announced Tuesday.
As yet another shocking video believed to show out-of-control teens inflicting a senseless killing in Las Vegas goes viral, Jonathan Lewis Sr. doesn’t want to see it.
More details are emerging about the 16-year-old accused of leaving a gun on a preschool playground, which led to a 2-year-old shooting herself, police said.