The Citizen (Gauteng)

Las Vegas police had few options

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– Las Vegas had spent years planning for the worst: training its police force according to an antiterror­ism protocol it adopted in 2009 to respond to mass shootings, chemical attacks, suicide bombings and planes flying into buildings, according to city officials and security profession­als.

But when it came to Sunday night’s attack that killed 58 people and wounded hundreds more at an open-air concert in the city, police found themselves with few options to stop the gunman quickly,

Las Vegas

they said. It underscore­d the difficulty American cities face in protecting citizens from attacks that can take unpredicta­ble forms.

Firing from the 32nd floor of a hotel near the city’s world famous neon-lit Strip, at night, at a range of 500 yards with an arsenal of high-velocity semiautoma­tic weapons modified to shoot rapidly, gunman Stephen Paddock had pulled the city into a nightmare that left him virtually unopposed for crucial minutes, with police unable to safely return fire.

The angles, the distances, and the presence of thousands of people made it impossible, they said.

“Our officers showed incredible restraint. They can fire that distance. It’s not safe to do so,” said Robert Chamberlin, a member of the Las Vegas police department’s counterter­rorism force. "You are firing 32 floors up, from 500m. So the trajectory of our rounds ... even if we were accurate, they’re going to go up into the ceiling, up into the next floor.

“Our officers knew they had to close, so that’s what they did,” he said. – Reuters

 ?? Picture:AFP ?? SCENE OF CARNAGE. A couple look at the two broken windows in the Mandalay Bay hotel from which gunfire was directed.
Picture:AFP SCENE OF CARNAGE. A couple look at the two broken windows in the Mandalay Bay hotel from which gunfire was directed.

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