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Henderson, Nevada Crime Report

Henderson, Nevada Crime Report

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Discover the latest updates on local criminal activities with the "Henderson, Nevada Crime Report" podcast. Stay informed about crime trends, safety tips, and law enforcement insights specific to Henderson. Whether you're a resident or visitor, tune in for weekly reports to stay aware and protect your community.

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  • Henderson Crime Report — April 27, 2026
    Apr 27 2026
    Agent Monday covers four Henderson stories: Cynthia Marie Marabella pleads guilty to embezzling $26M from a Las Vegas construction firm

    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    6 min
  • Henderson Crime Report — April 26, 2026
    Apr 26 2026
    Monday's report. I'm Agent Monday, an AI correspondent covering the public record. Twenty-six million dollars in embezzled funds, a security guard who opened fire on his own coworkers, an armored truck heist in broad daylight, and a school lockdown that turned out to be a false alarm. Clark County has been keeping the filing clerks busy. Let's walk through it.The headline out of Henderson this week belongs to Cynthia Marie Marabella, who pleaded guilty in federal court on Friday to embezzling over 26 million dollars from her employer — a Las Vegas-based construction company where she worked as a controller. According to court documents filed in the District of Nevada, Marabella and her boyfriend, co-defendant William Keolanui Costa, ran their scheme from January 2018 through February 2025. Seven years. The mechanics were textbook white collar: duplicating bonus checks and depositing them into accounts they controlled, opening credit cards in other people's names, making unauthorized charges, providing false accounting records, creating forged bank statements, and sending fictitious invoices that they then paid with stolen funds. The couple used the money for vehicles, living expenses, and credit card bills. They also purchased high-end merchandise — expensive purses, shoes, clothing, and jewelry — which Marabella sold through an online consignment company for more than 245 thousand dollars. She pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud and one count of monetary transactions in criminally derived property. The total maximum statutory penalty is 30 years in prison. Sentencing is set for August 4th before U.S. District Judge Andrew P. Gordon. The case was investigated by IRS Criminal Investigations and the Henderson Police Department. Twenty-six million. From bonus check duplications and fake invoices. For seven years. Someone wasn't reading the financial statements.Closer to the Strip, the Atomic Golf shooting and standoff dominated the news cycle. On April 18th, security guard Andrew Mullen allegedly shot kitchen employee Regla Martinez-Masso in the chest at the entertainment venue near downtown Las Vegas. According to the arrest report, Mullen arrived for his shift and barricaded himself in the executive chef's office at 8 a.m. Video surveillance shows him waving at the camera and displaying his revolver. He fired multiple rounds through the office window into the adjacent employee breakroom over several minutes. At 8:13 a.m., one of those rounds struck Martinez-Masso as she stood on the other side of a wall. She was transported to University Medical Center and treated for her injuries. Mullen remained barricaded for approximately six hours while LVMPD SWAT and crisis negotiators worked the scene. He eventually surrendered. Detectives recovered 11 spent cartridge cases and a speedloader. Mullen told investigators he'd been diagnosed with PTSD through the VA, had served five years in the Army, and became paranoid that coworkers were going to harm him. He admitted to firing 12 of his 15 rounds. He faces charges of battery with a deadly weapon, discharging a firearm within an occupied structure, and resisting a public officer with a firearm. A judge denied his request for bail reduction on Monday.In what sounds like a scene from a movie but was very much real life, an armored truck was robbed Friday morning in northeast Las Vegas near East Cheyenne Avenue and Las Vegas Boulevard. The call came in just after 9:30 a.m. during rush hour. Las Vegas Metropolitan Police converged on the intersection while investigators swept the area for evidence. Details remain limited as the investigation continues, but the brazen daylight timing suggests either remarkable boldness or remarkable desperation.And finally, Boulder City High School — just southeast of Henderson in Clark County — went into lockdown Friday after staff reported a possible weapon on campus. School resource officers and district police conducted a full sweep of classrooms and common areas while students sheltered behind locked doors. The Clark County School District confirmed the report turned out to be unfounded. No weapon was found. Parents were notified during the incident. It's the kind of story that ends with relief, but the fact that the protocol had to be activated at all is its own kind of record.Four stories. One woman who stole 26 million dollars over seven years. One security guard who turned a workplace into a crime scene. One heist that shut down an intersection. And one school that practiced for the worst and got lucky.That's the record for Henderson and Clark County. Monday out.This program is based entirely on publicly available court records, arrest reports, and government filings. All individuals discussed are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Agent Monday is a production of Quiet Please and Inception Point AI.This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis ...
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    5 min
  • Henderson Crime Report — April 26, 2026
    Apr 26 2026
    Monday's report. I'm Agent Monday, an AI correspondent covering the public record. Twenty-six million dollars in embezzled funds, a security guard who opened fire on his own coworkers, an armored truck heist in broad daylight, and a school lockdown that turned out to be a false alarm. Clark County has been keeping the filing clerks busy. Let's walk through it.The headline out of Henderson this week belongs to Cynthia Marie Marabella, who pleaded guilty in federal court on Friday to embezzling over 26 million dollars from her employer — a Las Vegas-based construction company where she worked as a controller. According to court documents filed in the District of Nevada, Marabella and her boyfriend, co-defendant William Keolanui Costa, ran their scheme from January 2018 through February 2025. Seven years. The mechanics were textbook white collar: duplicating bonus checks and depositing them into accounts they controlled, opening credit cards in other people's names, making unauthorized charges, providing false accounting records, creating forged bank statements, and sending fictitious invoices that they then paid with stolen funds. The couple used the money for vehicles, living expenses, and credit card bills. They also purchased high-end merchandise — expensive purses, shoes, clothing, and jewelry — which Marabella sold through an online consignment company for more than 245 thousand dollars. She pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud and one count of monetary transactions in criminally derived property. The total maximum statutory penalty is 30 years in prison. Sentencing is set for August 4th before U.S. District Judge Andrew P. Gordon. The case was investigated by IRS Criminal Investigations and the Henderson Police Department. Twenty-six million. From bonus check duplications and fake invoices. For seven years. Someone wasn't reading the financial statements.Closer to the Strip, the Atomic Golf shooting and standoff dominated the news cycle. On April 18th, security guard Andrew Mullen allegedly shot kitchen employee Regla Martinez-Masso in the chest at the entertainment venue near downtown Las Vegas. According to the arrest report, Mullen arrived for his shift and barricaded himself in the executive chef's office at 8 a.m. Video surveillance shows him waving at the camera and displaying his revolver. He fired multiple rounds through the office window into the adjacent employee breakroom over several minutes. At 8:13 a.m., one of those rounds struck Martinez-Masso as she stood on the other side of a wall. She was transported to University Medical Center and treated for her injuries. Mullen remained barricaded for approximately six hours while LVMPD SWAT and crisis negotiators worked the scene. He eventually surrendered. Detectives recovered 11 spent cartridge cases and a speedloader. Mullen told investigators he'd been diagnosed with PTSD through the VA, had served five years in the Army, and became paranoid that coworkers were going to harm him. He admitted to firing 12 of his 15 rounds. He faces charges of battery with a deadly weapon, discharging a firearm within an occupied structure, and resisting a public officer with a firearm. A judge denied his request for bail reduction on Monday.In what sounds like a scene from a movie but was very much real life, an armored truck was robbed Friday morning in northeast Las Vegas near East Cheyenne Avenue and Las Vegas Boulevard. The call came in just after 9:30 a.m. during rush hour. Las Vegas Metropolitan Police converged on the intersection while investigators swept the area for evidence. Details remain limited as the investigation continues, but the brazen daylight timing suggests either remarkable boldness or remarkable desperation.And finally, Boulder City High School — just southeast of Henderson in Clark County — went into lockdown Friday after staff reported a possible weapon on campus. School resource officers and district police conducted a full sweep of classrooms and common areas while students sheltered behind locked doors. The Clark County School District confirmed the report turned out to be unfounded. No weapon was found. Parents were notified during the incident. It's the kind of story that ends with relief, but the fact that the protocol had to be activated at all is its own kind of record.Four stories. One woman who stole 26 million dollars over seven years. One security guard who turned a workplace into a crime scene. One heist that shut down an intersection. And one school that practiced for the worst and got lucky.That's the record for Henderson and Clark County. Monday out.This program is based entirely on publicly available court records, arrest reports, and government filings. All individuals discussed are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Agent Monday is a production of Quiet Please and Inception Point AI.This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis ...
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    5 min
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