Las Vegas Flooding Sweeps People Away as Strip Becomes River

Newsweek
 
Las Vegas Flooding Sweeps People Away as Strip Becomes River
Wild Casino

Multiple people have been swept away in flash flooding, after lightning strikes and heavy rainfall hit Las Vegas on Wednesday, turning the famous Strip into a river and causing damage to buildings.

On Thursday morning, police officers were responding to several calls regarding people washed away by floodwater, per Fox 5. One man was said to have been located near Flamingo Wash stream in Sunrise Manor but could not be rescued. Local law-enforcement officers said there were two other people who had been washed away near Route 15 to the south of the city center; one had been rescued, but another, a woman, was still missing.

It comes just days after the region was battered by tropical storm Hilary, which brought flash flooding to California and left a path of destruction across the Pacific coast of Mexico.

"I talked with a man who witnessed it. He tells me he helped firefighters rescue one friend, but more are missing," Mike Allen, a reporter with the channel, posted to X, formerly , from the scene. "Police confirm that not everyone was saved."

Fox 5 also reported a similar call-out to the east of the city center, where one of two people had been rescued while a woman was missing.

Newsweek approached the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department via email for confirmation on Thursday.

Earlier in the day, the National Weather Service (NWS) station in Las Vegas had issued severe thunderstorm and flash-flood warnings for the area. Meteorologists attributed the precipitation to the remnants of tropical depression Harold, a former cyclone that made landfall in Texas on Tuesday.

Thunderstorm conditions were expected to continue in the region through Thursday and Friday, per NWS, with the "greatest rainfall chances will be on Thursday afternoon and evening"—suggesting worse flooding could be yet to come.

Footage from the Las Vegas Strip posted on social media shows approximately ankle-height water rapidly flowing down the road while cars tentatively make their way through the waterlogged roads. "The Vegas Strip is currently a river," one local X account commented.

Videos from Harrah's Las Vegas hotel and casino, on the Strip, show sections of ceiling in the casino having fallen in, with water dripping down on a soaked floor.

Newsweek approached Caesars Entertainment, which now owns Harrah's, via email for comment on Thursday.

The flash flooding is just the most recent occasion in which heavy rains have caused damage to the Strip's casinos. In August 2022, a similar weather event caused rain to pour through the ceilings of several casinos, including Planet Hollywood and Caesars Palace, dousing the gambling tables below.