Dr. Hisbay Ali may practice medicine again in six months if he meets certain conditions, the Nevada medical board determined.
Investigations
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Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners required more ethics and boundaries training for Dr. George Chambers, accused by multiple former patients of improper conduct.
The Nevada medical board is scheduled to settle allegations from six more patients against Dr. George Chambers.
Fired or now-retired officials were among the top paid city of Henderson employees last year, public records show.
The county has placed its head of construction management on administrative leave while it continues an investigation into a potential conflict of interest involving his wife’s firm.
The county approved the wife of a key public works official as a prime contractor on future projects.
In Clark County, the largest of the local governments, four of the 10 most highly compensated employees last year cashed out vacation and sick leave in the six figures.
A Las Vegas man is claiming the Metropolitan Police Department has failed to properly address threatening behavior from his neighbor, the son of a retired high-ranking police officer.
The Mohave County Medical Examiner’s office and National Park Service both refuse to provide details on a heat-related death. But that might violate Arizona state records laws.
The wife of a key Clark County public works official is part of a team that received a multimillion-dollar contract from the department, fueling concerns about a potential conflict of interest in the bidding process.
Running the offices cost more than $6.5 million in taxpayer dollars. Here’s the breakdown.
The Nevada Commission on Ethics wants a fine levied against Dwayne McClinton, who, according to a complaint, accepted free Golden Knights tickets while negotiating with the NHL team.
With more than 600 measles cases reported in 21 states as of April 3, health authorities are gearing up for the possibility of an outbreak in Nevada, where no cases have been reported this year.
Police officials relied on a broad executive order and a law that makes records confidential for one Nevada public safety entity to deny inquiries about one agency’s approach to an inaugural, ungated downtown festival.
The SEC’s actions point to the conclusion of a civil case centered on allegations of brazen fraud and lavish spending.