Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lights outlining Nevada’s shape on Henderson mountain disappear

Display on mountainsi­de in Henderson has vanished

- By Sabrina Schnur

If a person or people want to bring them back, no questions asked. I don’t need lights.’ a name. If they want solar lights for their house, I’ll buy them solar David Koch Installed lights in the shape of Nevada on mountain in Henderson

THE bright lights outlining the shape of Nevada featured on a Henderson mountain disappeare­d this week. The red and white solar-powered lights that have been positioned off the northern loop of the Black Mountain trail since April 17 went missing sometime between Saturday and Tuesday, according to local attorney David Koch, who placed them up there eight months ago.

“We had gone up on Saturday to turn the heart back to red. Before Christmas we had turned them to red and green. The next day, Sunday the 27th, it was kind of cloudy and that night the lights didn’t come on,” Koch said. “The same thing on Monday, cloudy and rainy and I thought maybe something happened to them. Tuesday was a sunny day. There was plenty of sun for the lights and none of them came on that

night.”

Koch hiked the steep hill Tuesday night and discovered no traces of the 60 lights that made the shape of Nevada with a heart over Clark County. He thought perhaps the Bureau of Land Management had removed them because the group had reached a deal with Koch that lights could only stay up until the end of the year.

But a BLM spokesman told Koch on Wednesday that the BLM didn’t take the lights down. Koch called it comical, because he was just about to lug the heavy lights back down the mountain this upcoming weekend. It took Koch and his 18-yearold son, Mason, 11 hours to carry four duffel bags to the site and put them up.

“It’s not an easy task to pull them down,” Koch said. “I’m not offended, but I kind of feel bad for the community.”

Koch said he had planned to keep them up for only a week but reached a deal with BLM for them to stay up longer. He said he often received online messages from people who were struggling during the pandemic and found solace in the glittering lights, which could be seen from downtown Henderson to the Mountain’s Edge area.

“One lady said her brother had passed away over the summer and she’d still go walk at night and look up at the lights,” Koch said. “Someone else was going through cancer and felt alone and would see the lights.”

If he had been able to take down the lights this weekend, Koch had planned to give them away to anyone who had donated to a local charity. He said he’d keep two of them as souvenirs.

Koch now has no plans to file a police report, though the cost of the missing lights is about $1,400. He just hopes that someone will anonymousl­y reach out or drop them back on the mountain.

“Maybe somebody, somewhere saw something. I’m not going to pursue some criminal investigat­ion,” he said. “If a person or people want to bring them back, no questions asked. I don’t need a name. If they want solar lights for their house, I’ll buy them solar lights.”

Koch said BLM offered him several other pieces of real estate that aren’t protected land if he’d like to put lights up again. He said that he isn’t planning to repeat the lights many residents have become so familiar with, but that he’d gladly help if anyone else is planning something similar.

“This was something I hadn’t heard any complaints about,” he said. “It was one of the positive things during the pandemic.”

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal file ?? David Koch, left, and son Mason in April below the Nevada light display they installed on Black Mountain in Henderson.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal file David Koch, left, and son Mason in April below the Nevada light display they installed on Black Mountain in Henderson.
 ?? David Koch ?? One of the solar lights positioned by David and Mason Koch atop of Black Mountain for their Nevada light display.
David Koch One of the solar lights positioned by David and Mason Koch atop of Black Mountain for their Nevada light display.
 ?? David Koch ?? Michael, left, and Mason Koch adjust the heart within the Nevada light display the family installed on Black Mountain in April. The lights vanished recently.
David Koch Michael, left, and Mason Koch adjust the heart within the Nevada light display the family installed on Black Mountain in April. The lights vanished recently.

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