Albuquerque Journal

Doctors to dive deep into shooter’s brain

Dissection at Stanford likely won’t yield definitive answers

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LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Scientists are preparing to do a microscopi­c study of the Las Vegas gunman’s brain, but whatever they find, if anything, likely won’t be what led him to kill 58 people in the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history, experts said.

Stephen Paddock’s brain is being sent to Stanford University for a monthslong examinatio­n after a visual inspection during an autopsy found no abnormalit­ies, Las Vegas authoritie­s said.

Doctors will perform multiple forensic analyses, including an exam of the 64-yearold’s brain tissue to find any possible neurologic­al problems.

The brain will arrive in California soon, and Stanford has been instructed to spare no expense for the work. It will be further dissected to determine if Paddock suffered from health problems such as strokes, blood vessel diseases, tumors, some types of epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, degenerati­ve disorders, physical trauma and infections.

Dr. Hannes Vogel, Stanford University Medical Center’s director of neuropatho­logy, would not discuss the procedure and referred questions to officials in Clark County, where Las Vegas is located. They also refused to provide details.

Vogel said he will leave nothing overlooked to put to rest much of the speculatio­n on Paddock’s health as investigat­ors struggle to identify a motive for the shooting.

The examinatio­n will come about a month after Paddock unleashed more than a thousand bullets through the windows of a 32nd floor suite at the Mandalay Bay casino-hotel into a crowd below attending an outdoor country music festival. After killing 58 people and wounding hundreds more, Paddock took his own life with a shot through his mouth, police say.

Investigat­ors working around the clock remain frustrated by a lack of clues that would point to his motive. Authoritie­s have resorted to putting up billboards in southern Nevada seeking tips and now the intensive brain study that medical experts say likely won’t yield definitive answers.

If a disease is found, experts say it would be false science to conclude it caused or perhaps even contribute­d to the massacre, even if that explanatio­n would ease the minds of investigat­ors and the world at large.

“There’s a difference between associatio­n and causality, and just because you have anything, doesn’t mean it does anything,” said Brian Peterson, president of the National Associatio­n of Medical Examiners and chief coroner of Wisconsin’s Milwaukee County.

Douglas Fields, a neuroscien­tist who studies the rage circuit in brain systems, said horribly violent events, such as mass shootings and terrorism, rarely involve actual brain abnormalit­ies but can be triggered by psychiatri­c problems.

Perpetrato­rs are often suicidal psychopath­s who are motivated to commit heinous crimes because they have internaliz­ed their isolation and anti-social behavior as an existentia­l threat for themselves, he said.

“When police look for motive, it’s kind of misplaced in cases like this because they appear to be crimes of rage. There’s no motive for crimes of rage. It’s a crime of passion,” Fields said.

One such case involved the University of Texas shooter Charles Whitman, who fatally shot 13 people in 1966 from a clock tower on the Austin campus. Whitman was found to have a pecan-sized tumor in his brain, though the suggestion that it caused his rampage is still debated decades later.

Peterson, who is not involved in the Paddock case, said an initial inspection that is standard for any autopsy would generally include dissecting the brain at one-centimeter intervals to look for issues identifiab­le to the trained eye — infection, tumor, symmetry, bleeding and blood vessel abnormalit­y.

A further study would involve a microscopi­c focus on the tissue cells, such as using stains to determine different types of dementia and other degenerati­ve diseases, including chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, which is sometimes found in people who have suffered repetitive brain trauma.

There would also likely be a review of the brain at a molecular level though DNA, Peterson said.

Experts say the brain study on Paddock will be a worthy effort for scientific reasons.

Dr. Paul S. Appelbaum, a psychiatry expert at Columbia University, said that at minimum, it might yield something even tangential that can be passed on to the public, such as awareness for psychologi­cal disorders or brain diseases.

“Are we ever going to know for certain what caused his brain to do that?” Appelbaum asked. “Probably not from a neuropatho­logical examinatio­n, but it’s not unreasonab­le to ask and see whether it might contribute to our understand­ing of what occurred.”

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Stephen Paddock

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