El Dorado News-Times

Vegas massacre memorial focusing on victim stories, lessons

- By Ken Ritter

LAS VEGAS (AP) — A panel planning a permanent memorial at the Las Vegas site of the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history is focusing on stories about the more than 58 people killed by gunfire and thousands left wounded and emotionall­y scarred, and on lessons learned.

A second online questionna­ire circulated this month by the 1 October Memorial Committee drew almost 5,200 responses in two weeks, according to a report Wednesday to Clark County commission­ers who will be asked in coming months to pick a designer and determine how stories of the October 2017 attack will be told.

Focus groups indicated the project should avoid political topics and personal details about the shooter, according to the report.

More than half the voluntary respondent­s to the unscientif­ic questionna­ire thought the memorial should include references to country music and about 40% said visitors should be able leave a personaliz­ed memento.

Four of five respondent­s said victim biographie­s and survivor stories should be included and that education should include support for mental health. Three of four agreed the memorial should show lessons learned by first responders and the hospitalit­y industry.

More than 65% of the 6,066 responses to a previous questionna­ire during a two-week period in March called it extremely or very important to have the memorial at the openair Las Vegas Strip concert venue that became a killing field.

MGM Resorts Internatio­nal, the casino company that owns the site, is donating part of it for the memorial.

Fifty-eight people died from gunfire that rained from upper-floor windows of the Mandalay Bay hotel into a crowd of 22,000 at the Route 91 Harvest Festival. More than 850 people were wounded or hurt fleeing the massacre. Authoritie­s said victims were from Nevada, California, 13 other U.S. states and Canada.

The deaths of at least two people later have been blamed on wounds they received that night.

The gunman, Stephen Paddock, killed himself with a handgun before police reached him in a suite strewn with 23 assaultsty­le weapons and ammunition. He was a 64-year-old high stakes gambler, former auditor and real estate businessma­n who lived in southern Nevada and the Reno area.

Local and federal investigat­ors concluded he acted alone, meticulous­ly planned the attack and appeared to seek notoriety. But they said they could not identify a clear motive.

The concert site has remained idle since the massacre. A memorial there would be separate from a Community Healing Garden created in downtown Las Vegas following the shooting.

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