Construction and debris removal continue as Mount Charleston works to recover from Tropical Storm Hilary.
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.
Justin Venegas, 41, shot at police and crashed head-on into a police vehicle after committing two carjackings.
A UNLV Athletics spokesperson confirmed they are aware on an incident involving a Rebels basketball player.
The annual ceremony recognizes those slain at the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting on Oct. 1, 2017, in the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
Lee Canyon and Kyle Canyon roads have been closed to the general public over five weeks since the remnants of Tropical Storm Hilary battered the mountain
A person was found dead inside a home which caught fire Wednesday morning in Henderson.
An alleged knife-wielding woman was shot and wounded by two Henderson police officers on Friday.
It wasn’t yet clear what caused the closure.
David A. Litwin, 64, was found guilty by a federal jury after an eight-day trial.
The Amargosa Opera House and Hotel near Death Valley was inundated by flooding from Tropical Storm Hilary’s remnants.
The blaze was just under 470 acres Sunday.
The police shooting happened in the 1000 block of Center Street, near Warm Springs Road and Lake Mead Parkway, at about 4:30 p.m. Friday.
A second juvenile was arrested Tuesday in the intentional hit-and-run death of a retired police chief, according to the Metropolitan Police Department.
The Metropolitan Police Department needs to be more transparent, according to Benjamin Lipman, the Review-Journal’s chief legal officer.
Las Vegas casinos have been hit hard by cyberattacks and scammers in recent months.
