Nevada
Nevada Immigrant Coalition rallies in downtown Las Vegas on May Day to demand worker protections
LAS VEGAS (KTNV) — The Nevada Immigrant Coalition held a march and rally in downtown Las Vegas on May Day, joining similar demonstrations across the country to demand better treatment for immigrant families and workers.
The event coincided with First Friday, drawing attention to the economic pressures facing local businesses and workers as costs continue to rise.
Noe’ Orozco, a representative with the Nevada Immigrant Coalition, said the group is focused on elevating people over corporations.
WATCH | Nevada Immigrant Coalition rallies on May Day to demand worker protections
Nevada Immigrant Coalition rallies on May Day to demand worker protections
“We’re trying to put people above corporations, and we one way. You can do that is definitely by supporting the local businesses, because a lot of the local businesses, they, they sustain themselves,” Orozco said.
Many local business owners and workers say they rely on the foot traffic that First Friday generates each month.
“It’s our one night a month that we get walking traffic as if we’re on Fremont Street or on the Strip,” said a business owner at First Friday.
KTNV
Workers also described the financial strain of the current economy.
“It’s very difficult to be living in the economy now without having two jobs,” said another business owner at First Friday.
The coalition said it is also responding to a recent surge in immigration enforcement activity across Nevada, which it says is negatively affecting local families.
KTNV
“Since the start of last year, we’ve seen a lot more of those overlapping conversations happening. And so, as I mentioned, right, highlighting the workers’ rights and a lot of those workers, a lot of workers that we engage with our migrant or immigrant workers, immigrant families, and so regardless of what industry you’re looking at, there is going to be an immigrant household that is being impacted,” Orozco said.
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Nevada
Court records: Nevada prison system doesn’t have execution drugs
LAS VEGAS (KTNV) — The Nevada Department Of Corrections may not have the drugs needed to carry out several executions.
Last month, Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson stated his office plans to seek execution warrants for three inmates who have been on death row for years.
Zane Floyd was convicted and sentenced to death for killing four people and wounding a fifth during an attack at a Las Vegas Albertsons in 1999.
Donald Sherman was convicted and sentenced to death for using a hammer to kill a retired doctor while he slept in 1994.
Sterling Atkins was convicted and sentenced to death for beating, sexually assaulting, and strangling a mother in North Las Vegas in 1994.
When looking at a new federal court filing from Wednesday, attorneys for the NDOC wrote “At the current time, all medications previously obtained through the Cardinal Health portal have expired, NDOC is not in the possess of any unexpired drugs that are contained in the Protocol, and NDOC has confirmed to [attorneys for Floyd, Sherman, and Atkins] that there is no plan to change the protocol to proceed with the use of expired medications.”
According to court records, the NDOC is following protocols that were proposed in 2021, which include a three-drug lethal injection procedure “in which the drugs midazolam, fentanyl and cisatracurium” are used.
When looking at what these drugs are generally used for, the Mayo Clinic says midazolam is “used to produce sleepiness or drowsiness and relieve anxiety before surgery or certain procedures.” Fentanyl injections are “used to relieve severe pain during and after surgery. It is also used with other medicines just before or during an operation to help the anesthetic work better.” Cisatracurium injections are typically “used before and during surgery to provide muscle relaxation.”
When looking at past cases that have used similar drugs, fentanyl has been used only once in an execution protocol. That was in 2018 in Nebraska.
The court filing states attorneys for the three inmates have offered a different protocol that would contain fentanyl, ketamine, and potassium (chloride or acetate) and not include cisatracurium.
Attorneys for the inmates also suggested using pentobarbital, which is typically used as a medical sedative and a medicine that helps with emergency seizure control, as an alternative means of execution.
Ketamine has not been used in an execution. The State of Utah used a protocol of ketamine, fentanyl, and potassium chloride in 2024. However, they changed their systems to a one-drug protocol using pentobarbital.
Why does the medication combo matter?
Advocates say it’s because lethal injections aren’t the most efficient ways to carry out executions.
“Execution is brutal. I think that a lot of the public think these guys are just kind of peacefully going to sleep in the death chamber and we know, from expert witnesses and anesthesiologists who have reviewed hundreds of autopsies, who have witnessed these executions, who know these drugs better than anybody in the world, what they say is to a medical certainty, these people are suffering,” said journalist and author Gianna Toboni, who wrote a book called The Volunteer, which looks at the history of the death penalty in the United States, specifically through the eyes of former inmate Scott Dozier. “I think when we talk about firing squad and nitrogen gas, a lot of people are stunned like ‘Oh my God. We’re going back to these gruesome, brutal methods.’ Guess what? Lethal injection is pretty brutal too. It has the highest rate of botched executions at 7%.”
CHANNEL 13 ARCHIVES: Is the death penalty effective in Nevada?
Is the death penalty effective in Nevada?
When it comes to how the State of Nevada is obtaining the drugs that will be used for the proposed executions, “NDOC takes the position that contemplation of potential alternative sources for procuring medications are, at this time, protected by the deliberate process privilege, and therefore are not discoverable unless and until Director Dzurenda acquires medications to be used in the execution.”
Toboni previously told me that is not unusual because there are several states across the U.S. who keep the processes for how they obtain execution drugs under wraps.
“A lot of states are going to what’s called compounding pharmacies. Typically, these pharmacies are used for people who have allergies but need a specific medication. So they’ll combine different ingredients in order to make a custom drug for somebody. These drugs are not FDA-approved. They’re not in any way regulated by the federal government,” Toboni explained.
Toboni worked with the NDOC a lot while researching her book and says she understands how difficult this process is.
“Now, I understand the challenge that the prison system is up against and James Dzurenda, by no means, had it easy. He was genuinely trying to get the drugs in order to do his job, to carry out that execution, and the fact of the matter is it’s hard to get these drugs.”
As for Nevada, according to the court filing, the Cardinal Health portal “continues to be the primary and preferred source for obtaining medications that may be used in executions”, but “Director Dzurenda notes that he does not feel bound to pursue access to medications through the portal only and may pursue procurement of medications through other lawful channels.”
When looking at the federal court docket, no future hearing dates have been set. However, if one is needed, the court filing says it will be scheduled for June 22, 2026.
Nevada has not carried out an execution since 2006.
Nevada
Nevada postal workers launch national vote-by-mail ad campaign
LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — Nevada’s tradition of voting by mail is front and center in a new national ad campaign launched today in Las Vegas.
The Nevada State Postal Workers Union rolled out a television spot urging Americans to “vote by mail — keep it, protect it, expand it.”
The ad features real voters, from college students and military members to parents, seniors and people with disabilities, who say mail ballots let them participate even when they can’t make it to the polls.
MORE ON FOX5: Clark County primary voting guide: Registration, ballot tracking and key dates
Union leaders say a new bipartisan poll shows that mail voting is widely popular. They point to postal service data from 2024 showing nearly all ballots were delivered within five days.
“The public can rest assured and feel confident when participating in all elections because it has proven that vote by mail works, said President of the Las Vegas Postal Workers Union Terrence Johnson. “The postal workers union and the postal service are committed to making sure every ballot makes it to its correct destination.”
The spot is airing on broadcast and cable in Las Vegas today and in Reno tomorrow, before expanding to Washington, D.C. and other states as primary season continues.
Copyright 2026 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Nevada
NDOW captures bear spotted in Reno tree near 4th and Keystone
Game wardens captured a bear that was spotted in a tree near Fourth Street and Keystone Avenue west of downtown Reno on Thursday, May 21.
“The bear safely came down from the tree and entered a culvert trap,” the Nevada Department of Wildlife wrote on Facebook just before 3 p.m. “NDOW staff have secured the bear, and it is being transported for processing to determine its age and sex.”
Bears can be a common occurrence in Reno as the animals wander down from the mountains into the city.
Last year, NDOW told the Reno Gazette Journal that it got about 15 calls a month in September and October about bear activity in Northern Nevada as the animals searched for food before winter.
Bear-human interactions can be dangerous for both bears and humans. NDOW recommends securing garbage, keeping a clean yard and never approaching bears when you see them in order to avoid potentially dangerous encounters with the wild animals.
Are bears in Nevada unusual?
Bears lived in Nevada long before the first settlers came to the region. But by 1900, bear populations had been destroyed for a variety of reasons, including unregulated hunting, conflicts with settlers’ livestock and clear-cutting of forests.
Conservation and habitat regeneration increased bear populations in Nevada dramatically since the 1980s.
You can learn more at the Nevada Department of Wildlife’s website.
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