Boston Herald

One year later, Vegas looks beyond shooting

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LAS VEGAS — A small bouquet of dried flowers was wedged inside the padlock on Gate 5 of the killing ground that was the Route 91 Harvest Festival one recent day, the only visible reminder that it was the site of the worst mass shooting in modern American history.

A peek inside the chain-link fence, covered in green sheeting to keep out prying eyes, revealed a sprawling patch of asphalt and little else. Towering above were the gold windows of the Mandalay Bay, where a gambler spent the last minutes of his life in room 32-135 taking the lives of 58 others in a meticulous­ly planned slaughter.

Around Las Vegas, there are scattered remembranc­es of the horrors of that night a year ago.

Almost every week, there’s another court-ordered release of police body-camera videos that provide flashbacks to the night the gunman turned the fun of the glittering Las Vegas Strip into a nightmare of death and despair. And lawsuits by MGM Resorts Internatio­nal to force survivors to give up their right to sue the casino company that owns Mandalay Bay opened fresh wounds over the summer.

But the “Vegas Strong” T-shirts and car stickers have largely been put away. The original handmade white crosses for each victim have long since been taken away from the “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign to eventually reside in a museum in neighborin­g Henderson, though some new ones were brought in for the anniversar­y.

There has been no closure, at least officially. Authoritie­s say they will likely never be able to determine what it was that turned a high-limit video poker player into a mass murderer.

“A lot of the feeling among people is more, `Let’s move on,’ ” said Pauline Ng Lee, a community activist and chairwoman of the Nevada Republican Men’s Club. “We don’t have a lot of long traditions here. You can see it with buildings. Casinos come up, casinos get knocked down. People tend to look forward, not back.”

Indeed, a look out one side of the high windows of the Mandalay Bay shows the normal sight of dozens of tourists lined up to have their pictures taken in front of the Welcome to Las Vegas sign. A glance to the left draws the eye to the vacated and somber site of the shooting on 15 acres of valuable Las Vegas Strip land that for the foreseeabl­e future simply cannot be used for anything.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the hotel, work goes on around the clock on a new $1.9 billion stadium that will be the home of the NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders beginning in 2020. It’s a reminder that Las Vegas moves on like it always has, through the good times and the bad.

“A lot of people have probably put it out of their minds,” said Steve Sisolak, a Clark County commission­er who in the hours after the shooting spearheade­d a victim’s fund that raised millions and is now running for governor. “The anniversar­y is going to bring up a lot of feelings, good and bad.”

The city will mark the anniversar­y with a string of events in the days surroundin­g Oct. 1. And at 10:01 p.m. — the time the shooting began — the lights on gleaming marquees will dim along the Strip.

It’s not closure, but it is one more tribute in a way only Las Vegas can give.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? REMEMBERIN­G TRAGEDY: People pray together yesterday at a makeshift memorial in Las Vegas, one day before the anniversar­y of the mass shooting that left 58 dead at a concert festival on the Strip.
AP PHOTO REMEMBERIN­G TRAGEDY: People pray together yesterday at a makeshift memorial in Las Vegas, one day before the anniversar­y of the mass shooting that left 58 dead at a concert festival on the Strip.

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