A Las Vegas nurse practitioner bought a $594,000 Ferrari and a $4.6 million beach resort in the Philippines while allegedly running a $906 million fraud scheme that targeted elderly hospice patients for unneeded procedures.
Marizel Yukee has been indicted in the biggest health care fraud takedown in US history.
Feds seized 8 cars, $467K cash, and several Nevada properties — including a house on (no joke) Money Street in Pahrump.
Man copes with loss of hand after Las Vegas crash involving suspected DUI driver https://t.co/v8e4Nfg5gq via @reviewjournal
The Nevada legislation should take note on this case and we need stronger DUI laws. @bryanhorwath@NVLatinoLeg@NVLegislature
🚨 BREAKING: Nevada Sheriff Kevin McMahill is being praised nationwide for REFUSING to release a convicted felon with 35 prior arrests — despite his release being ordered by a leftist judge
He's now being threatened with CONTEMPT for protecting his county.
BRAVO, SHERIFF! 👏🏻🇺🇸
@WallStreetApes The Nevada legislators caused this problem. especially the Democrats they made it a law that prevented law-enforcement from stopping vehicles for expired tags or no license plates. Those vehicles also don’t have insurance. The reason our rates are so high.
@NewswirePatriot It has become so clear that our current judges are so disconnected from the public safety. Until it happens to someone, they are close to or love. Stronger legislation is needed.
@FOX5Vegas Is it really free? The funding has to come from somewhere. The coddling of repeat offenders needs to stop. Some people just cannot be rehabilitated.
@News3LV Nothing is going to change until there is stronger legislation, and they get rid of the pre-trial risk assessment program. Go back to 72 hour releases versus the 24 hour catch & release program right now.
A judge said Thursday that he would not hold Las Vegas police in contempt for refusing to release a defendant with a long record onto electronic monitoring.
STORY: https://t.co/dR8KRJuiG2
This is a legislative issue. We need to go back to a 72 hour hearing versus a 24 hour release hearing. People sit in custody for an additional two weeks until a monitor becomes available.
“I don’t know how else to bring this to the public’s attention -- and the judge’s attention -- that I cannot effectively supervise these people when they ask me to put them out on electronic monitoring,” Sheriff Kevin McMahill tells me. https://t.co/7ijN8s5aT1