The Nevada Independent

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The Nevada Independent

Kelvin Atkinson

AG Ford, Speaker Yeager are top Nevada recipients of trips paid for by outside groups

Among the key takeaways: Ford and Yeager reported the highest aggregate value of trips provided to them, followed by Republican Lt. Gov. Stavros Anthony, whose travels to Greece, Germany, Mexico and some U.S. destinations came with $15,000 worth of covered costs.

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Photo of the front of the Nevada Legislature building.

SEIU executive board member announces campaign for McCurdy's open Assembly seat

Summers-Armstrong has served as chief steward for Regional Transportation Commission. Since May, she has been an executive board member of SEIU Nevada, which represents thousands of health care workers and public employees in the state. According to her campaign announcement, advocating for cash bail reform is one reason Summers-Armstrong decided to run for office.

Nicholas A. Trutanich, United States Attorney for the District of Nevada and Ray Johnson, Assistant Special Agent in Charge for the Federal Bureau of Investigation

Indy Q&A: U.S. Attorney Nick Trutanich on sex trafficking, marijuana and public corruption

One of the faces at the forefront of efforts against human trafficking is Nick Trutanich, U.S. attorney for the District of Nevada, whose office is tasked with investigating such cases. The Nevada Independent caught up with Trutanich at the seminar to discuss the challenges of those prosecutions, as well as his office's priorities on marijuana enforcement and public corruption cases.

Democrats introduce last-minute campaign finance reform bill

SB557, which was introduced into the Senate late Saturday, marks a push by Cannizzaro and other legislative Democrats to improve the state's campaign finance laws after former Senate Majority Leader Kelvin Atkinson resigned in disgrace amid a federal investigation into his use of campaign funds. All 13 Senate Democrats signed on as co-sponsors to the bill.

Senate approves gun background check bill amid fierce debate

Emotional testimony from nearly two-thirds of the 21 senators dominated debate on Wednesday, with at least two senators saying close family members had been killed by gun violence. But Republicans and Democrats staunchly disagreed over whether the legislation would fulfill the will of voters who approved a substantially similar 2016 ballot initiative or create arbitrary and unneeded restrictions for gun owners.

Follow the Money: Lawmakers raised $11.7 million throughout 2018 election cycle

The collected data offers a picture, though, of how the most powerful and well-connected industries in Nevada — gaming, energy and organized labor — contribute to campaigns and offers a glimpse at how legislative campaigns are funded and operate. It also lends useful context as the 120-day Legislature gets underway, and lawmakers face pressure and requests from the very same businesses and entities that helped fund their campaigns.