Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)
■ Friends, family create memorial for Route 91 victim Quinton Robbins.
Friends and family worked through the day Saturday in the hills behind Racetrack Road in Henderson creating a memorial for Route 91 Harvest festival shooting victim Quinton Robbins.
Coaches, Basic High School basketball players, close friends and Robbins’ father and grandfather were at the site to paint a “Q” in Robbins’ honor near the familiar “B” for Basic.
Robbins, 20, a Henderson resident, was the second-youngest person killed in the Oct. 1 mass shooting. He was an assistant basketball coach at Basic, where he had played basketball and golf and graduated in 2015. He studied biochemistry at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
James DiNicola, a recreation services supervisor for the city of Henderson, told the Las Vegas Review-Journal earlier this month that Robbins, whom he supervised, was promoted twice during his time working for the city. As a lead recreational assistant, Robbins oversaw adult sports leagues, DiNicola said.
Robbins also played in an adult basketball league and managed his flag football and softball teams, DiNicola said.
“He was friends with everybody,” DiNicola said. “Not just a co-worker, but a friend.”
Robbins, fellow Basic grad Cameron Robinson and police officer and youth football coach Charleston Hartfield, also killed in the shooting, were honored with a moment of silence at Basic’s Oct. 6 home football game against Coronado.
And on Oct. 8, the Los Angeles Lakers had a moment of silence for Robbins and the other shooting victims before their exhibition game with the Sacramento Kings at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.