Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)
FBI CLOSER TO DR AWING CONCLUSION ON GUNMAN’S MOTIVE
Agent in charge says Paddock had no ties to terror or hate groups
A month into the investigation of why Stephen Paddock indiscriminately rained gunfire on thousands of concert attendees, resulting in the death of 58 and injuring hundreds at the Route 91 Harvest Festival, investigators maintain that there is absolutely no indication the gunman was ideologically driven or affiliated with any international or domestic terror or hate group.
But investigators have made significant strides in their efforts to try to determine the how and the why the 64-year-old Mesquite gunman decided to shatter windows of a 32nd story Mandalay Bay suite, bringing forth the biggest loss of life during a shooting in modern U.S. history Oct. 1 on the Las Vegas Strip, said Aaron Rouse, FBI Las Vegas’ special agent in charge.
“We do know a lot more (about Paddock) than when we started,” Rouse told the Sun last week. “I feel like we are going in the correct direction to understand why this happened.”
Asked if investigators had pinpointed a possible motive, Rouse said he believed that, “When we’re done, we’ll have as close to an answer on the why as you’re going to be able to come to without talking with (Paddock).”
But before that conclusion is made and publicly announced, investigators need to ensure that determination comes from evidence and facts and not from speculation or assumption, Rouse said, asking for patience from the public. “It won’t be as fast as people would want it to be. This isn’t a TV show.”
Last week, Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo told KLAS-TV that Paddock may have been depressed after losing a significant amount of money in the past two years and that may have been a “determining factor” in the shooting. “
“This individual was status-driven, based
on how he liked to be recognized in the casino environment and how he liked to be recognized by his friends and family,” Lombardo said. “So, obviously, that was starting to decline in the short period of time, and that may have had a determining effect on why he did what he did.”
Since the Oct. 1 shooting, investigators have received more than 4,000 tips, Rouse said.
Initially, the probe extended worldwide, but it’s scaled down since agents got a lot of the answers they were searching for, which include Paddock’s movements and contacts, Rouse said. Briefings are held daily and new developments are communicated to Metro Police, which is working in conjunction with its federal counterpart.
At one point more than 300 FBI personnel had been summoned to the Route 91 probe, with hundreds more in rotation when the original group became fatigued. The FBI’s Evidence Response Team “painstakingly” worked side by side with Metro’s forensic investigators in a “very long and detailed effort” to measure and study the killing field.
“When they’re done with their final report, there will be — I think — as best representation forensically of what happened as you can possibly ask for,” Rouse said. And that information led investigators in “good directions.”
The agency’s victim assistance unit repatriated belongings left behind by the victims with their loved ones. “You never quite know how a small object is going to affect someone’s life,” Rouse said.
Interviews and follow-ups have been conducted and subpoenas have been served and returned. It’s not rare to see hundreds or even thousands of these court orders in an investigation of this scale, Rouse said. Footage related to the shooting, a substantial amount turned in by civilians, has amounted to more than 40 terabytes.
Rouse said video provided by the public has helped tighten a timeline, which has seen several adjustments. “We can’t say ‘thank you’ enough.”
“We’ve been very fortunate that we’ve had a fairly good, robust understanding of the events that have gone on, and unfortunately people got wrapped up around a timeline,” Rouse said. Metro Police had come under fire for inconsistencies in its original timeline for how the events unfolded in the mass shooting.
Responding to criticism of the shifting timeline, Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo said during the last public briefing Oct. 13 that information released in the days after the shooting was what investigators knew at the time and was intended to “calm the public” and not serve as an official account or build a legal case.
The current timeline remains consistent, Rouse said.
As with other modern mass-casualty events, conspiracy theories have been rampant online. Was there a second shooter; was it a false-flag operation, is there a government cover-up?
All evidence points to Paddock being the only shooter and “we’re too busy to pay attention” to online conspiracy theorists, Rouse said.
“Thousands of people have been involved in this effort; (a cover-up) would require an effort to keep all of them in line with the same story and that doesn’t happen in real life,” Rouse said. “So we’re going to continue to focus on the facts, we’re going to continue to focus on being thorough, and it will take as long as it takes. But I believe we’re making significant progress.”
Asked if misinformation had led to false tips, Rouse said that it happened in every investigation.
“I think it becomes more intensified because of the media outpouring on this particular event,” Rouse said. But investigators follow every lead to assure that what’s being reported “absolutely did or did not happen.”
Victims, their loved ones and the public deserve to learn the truth from the FBI, Rouse said, as that contributes to the trust and confidence the federal agency seeks. “I have the ultimate confidence to know that we’re following a tried-and-true course that has worked well for law enforcement agencies worldwide.”
Nevada can be proud of the public-private partnerships, Rouse said.
“Bad things are going to happen,” Rouse said. “It’s how you respond to them that shows your true sense of community, and this is a strong community.”