Lethbridge Herald

Police change timeline of Las Vegas massacre

Explanatio­ns made for time lapse

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Las Vegas investigat­ors offered a new version of events Friday in a shifting timeline surroundin­g the deadliest shooting in modern U.S. history as they described how the gunman opened fire on nearby airport jet fuel tanks and on police officers arriving at the massacre.

Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo held a highly anticipate­d news conference alongside the top FBI agent in Las Vegas amid questions about whether police could have done more to stop gunman Stephen Paddock on Oct. 1.

They provided no new informatio­n about Paddock’s motivation as he killed 58 people and wounded more than 500 at a country music festival. Forty-five people remain hospitaliz­ed in critical condition, Lombardo said.

The sheriff said an autopsy has been performed on Paddock, and the coroner observed “no abnormalit­ies” in his brain. He said the brain has been shipped to a facility to do a microscopi­c evaluation.

Lombardo confirmed that Paddock intentiona­lly opened fire on jet fuel tanks at the nearby Las Vegas airport and said he took shots at arriving police officers, possibly to keep them at bay as police rushed to his room.

But nearly two weeks after the massacre, questions remain unanswered.

What drove Paddock to open fire on the country music festival? Police and the FBI say they’re still at a loss to explain his motive but said they have found no signs that he had ideologies or connection­s to any groups.

Why did Paddock stop firing into the concert? Authoritie­s do not know, but police apparently had not reached his hotel room by that point.

In a chronology provided Monday, Lombardo had said Paddock started spraying 200 rounds from his suite into the hallway of the Mandalay Bay at 9:59 p.m. Oct. 1, wounding an unarmed security guard in the leg.

He said Friday that the security guard came to a barricaded stairwell door at 9:59 and wasn’t shot until around 10:05 p.m.

About that time, the gunman unleashed a barrage of bullets on the festival crowd. Then he killed himself with a gunshot to the head.

Lombardo’s newest version of events aligns with that Mandalay Bay officials said Thursday. They had disputed whether six minutes actually passed between the first shots in the hallway and the start of the concert rampage and said Paddock may have wounded the security guard within 40 seconds of firing into the crowd.

Earlier this week, lawyers had questioned why police and security weren’t able to stop Paddock sooner when authoritie­s said six minutes passed between the bursts of gunfire.

Lombardo also pushed back against criticism of his office over whether more could have been done to stop the shooter.

“In the public space, the word incompeten­t has been brought forward. I am absolutely offended with that characteri­zation,” he said.

The 10-minute attack on the crowd began at 10:05 p.m., when the 64-year-old real estate investor and retired accountant began firing more than 1,000 rounds from two bashed-out windows, police said. Police didn’t arrive on the 32nd floor until 10:17 p.m., two minutes after he had stopped shooting, according to Lombardo.

The wounded guard, Jesus Campos, used his radio to call for help, the statement said. A maintenanc­e worker, Stephen Schuck, has said he also called for help on his radio, asking a dispatcher to call the police because someone was shooting a rifle on the 32nd floor.

It’s not clear what Mandalay Bay maintenanc­e and security workers did with those messages by the guard and maintenanc­e worker.

The timeline given by police earlier this week differed dramatical­ly from the one they gave last week: that Paddock wounded Campos after he had opened fire on the crowd.

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