There’s no place like home for the holidays. But what if home is the last place you want to be?
Rachel Crosby
Rachel Crosby is an investigative reporter at the Review-Journal. The University of Florida graduate and Las Vegas native cut her teeth at internships with the Tampa Bay Times and Chicago Tribune before starting at the Review-Journal as a nightside crime reporter and columnist in 2015. Her work has helped document the scope of the Oct. 1 mass shooting.
Two service rifles were stolen May 17 from a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officer’s department vehicle at a northeast Las Vegas apartment complex. A month later, an 18-year-old man armed with one of the rifles was shot and killed by Las Vegas police.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Laurel Babero’s death last month was ruled a suicide Tuesday by the Clark County coroner’s office.
The Lee Canyon bunny hill opened Friday, but if you’re thinking about hopping up to Mt. Charleston this weekend, officials ask that you do so safely.
A new women’s safety class offered through the Metropolitan Police Department focuses on “making good decisions to avoid being placed in a situation where you can be an easy target,” according to Lt. Kristine Buist.
Willie Worthams, who sometimes nodded in agreement as the judge spoke, kept his comments brief “out of respect for the family.” He took responsibility for the crash.
Four local breweries will brew Sierra Nevada’s new Resilience IPA, serve it in their taprooms and donate 100 percent of the proceeds to victims of California’s Camp Fire.
A North Las Vegas K-9 named Kya was injured Saturday while she and her handler searched for Camp Fire victims in Northern California.
A 6-year-old North Las Vegas boy whose compromised immune system prevents him from playing outside received an air-conditioned playhouse Monday.
Expect to see more police officers at shopping centers around the Las Vegas Valley this holiday season.
A Nevada bankruptcy judge was found dead Monday at a federal court building in downtown Las Vegas, officials said.
Five men were indicted Thursday in connection with a lucrative sex-trafficking ring operating out of Clark County.
Jesus Fernandez, a 48-year-old Las Vegas native, was one of the first few Camp Fire victims identified this week, killed as the blaze tore through the mountain community of Paradise, California.
Little more than a year after surviving the Route 91 Harvest festival attack, Stacie Power once again found herself defenseless, tied to another disaster. This time, she was waiting to learn whether her parents were alive or dead.
The cold front that arrived early Thursday morning is sticking around, National Weather Service meteorologist Todd Lericos said.