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The Transy Rambler was denied media access to cover President Donald Trump's rally tonight at Rupp Arena in downtown Lexington. Rambler staffers received an email from Trump’s Press Office this weekend rejecting media credentials for two student editors. It gave no reason why. 290
There are places all over the Las Vegas region that are familiar to police. Hot spots that generate a lot of calls. Some might surprise you!KTNV in Las Vegas obtained a year's worth of data from Las Vegas, North Las Vegas and Henderson police departments to track the top locations. Data show police are responding to many of the same places every day, several times a day. As expected, some of the biggest Las Vegas Strip properties with the most traffic generate the most calls to police. The Strip is in Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department's jurisdiction.New to the top 10 in 2,018, at number 10, is the Wynn Las Vegas with 1,064 calls. That's up from 930 calls in 2,017.Fashion Show mall moved into the top ten also, racking up 1,125 in 2018. That means LVMPD responded on average three times a day, every single day. Click each location for ranking and number of service callsThe 5th location with the most calls is Planet Hollywood at 1,312. In 4th place with 1,567, The Cosmopolitan. The 3rd location is the Bellagio with 1,646 calls. Topped by Caesars Palace in 2nd place at 2,094.And sitting at number one for the second year in a row is MGM Grand with 2,492 calls for service in 2018.While the Wynn and Fashion Show mall are new to the Hot Spots list, the Flamingo hotel and Cromwell casino dropped out of the Top 10 for locations on the Strip. LVMPD tells us the vast majority of these calls are for unspecified trouble, disturbances, suspicious vehicles and cars and theft. 1503

They met for the first time a few weeks before Christmas — the woman serving a life sentence for killing a man who bought her for sex as a teenager, and a pastor who believed in her.At the time of their meeting, high-profile advocates had been calling for clemency for Cyntoia Denise Brown, including a US Congressman and A-list celebrities like 358
Those who live in El Paso, Texas—a city that lives on the U.S. and Mexico borders—describes their home as a loving place.“Everybody knows everybody, seems that way,” says resident Ruben Vuentes. Vuentes says the people of El Paso are not close-minded. Resident Alicia Brown shares the same sentiment. She says she’s never felt out of place because of the color of her skin. “There’s no racism here,” she says. “I don’t feel it. I’ve never felt it in all my life.”Now, those living in the close-knit community are trying to heal after a gunman killed 22 people and injured dozens of others Saturday at a local Walmart. Police say the 21-year-old white, male suspect is believed to be the author of a racist, anti-Hispanic 2,300-word document found online. Police say the manifesto was filled with white nationalist language and blamed immigrants for taking away jobs. El Paso has found itself at the center of the Trump administration’s hardline stance on immigration due to its proximity to the border. Marisa Limon Garza with the Hope Border Institute says the community is family and that include El Pasoans and Mexican nationals, just across the border in Juarez. “These border lands, these fences, these structures, are things that were imposed on us,” she says. But this has been a binational community for so long, and it’s one we find great beauty in.”It’s a melting pot of immigrants and Mexican nationals, and the community sees it as an asset. “This city is surviving because of the people coming from Juarez, says Brown. “What people don’t realize is they are part of this economy. The people that were at Walmart, they were shopping for clothes, school supplies, just like all of us.”Brown says when the shooting happened, she did worry the community—this family—might have been shattered. But that isn’t the case.“Because really, he didn’t; he brought us together. He united us,” Brown says of the shooter. 1931
The Supreme Court unanimously held on Wednesday that the 8th Amendment's prohibition on excessive fines applies to state and local governments, in addition to the federal governmentThe opinion was written and delivered from the bench by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, her first opinion issued since her cancer surgery in December.Ginsburg was present for oral arguments in the case, which took place in late November."Like the Eighth Amendment's proscriptions of 'cruel and unusual punishment' and '[e]xcessive bail,' the protection against excessive fines guards against abuses of government's punitive or criminal law-enforcement authority," 654
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