The car took off in a neighborhood after an officer checked the license plate of a silver Kia in an intersection and found it was stolen.
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The White House wanted the U.S. Navy to keep a warship named for the late Sen. John McCain out of President Donald Trumps view during his trip to Japan, three U.S. officials said Wednesday.
The U.S. has accused Tehran of being behind a string of incidents this month, including the alleged sabotage of oil tankers off the Emirati coast.
South Korea’s Foreign Ministry confirmed that 33 of its citizens were on the boat and said 19 were still missing.
Boulder City officials this week received an unsolicited anonymous donation of more than $1.34 million to benefit a community pool at Broadbent Park.
The Democratic National Committee has dropped the Las Vegas Review-Journal poll from its list of surveys that determine which candidates are eligible to participate in primary debates, even though the newspaper does not plan to conduct polls before the February 2020 caucus.
An amended version of a sweeping gun-control law was approved by a Nevada legislative committee Wednesday.
Rep. Steven Horsford joined outdoor advocates Wednesday at a North Las Vegas park to call for more funding for the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund.
The dramatic vote, less than two months after parliamentary elections, sent the longtime leader’s future into turmoil.
When she was born, the baby girl weighed about the same as an apple.
The Las Vegas City Council will consider a deal next week to build a soccer stadium on the site of Cashman Field to house a Major League Soccer expansion franchise.
Sen. John Barrasso said “it’s time to end the political games” and complete the licensing on the Department of Energy’s application to build a permanent nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain.
Scott Daniel Warren was arrested in 2018 when Border Patrol agents found him at a property used to provide aid to immigrants in Ajo, Arizona.
Alex Whipple’s attorney Shannon Demler said his client “knows he did something that’s inexcusable.”
Nepal, one of the poorest countries in the world, makes $300 million a year in permits for mountain climbing.