Las Vegas Review-Journal

Oct. 1 takeaways number 70-plus

FEMA report on event response probes, praises

- By Rachel Crosby and Rio Lacanlale Las Vegas Review-journal

Las Vegas police and Clark County firefighte­rs experience­d numerous communicat­ion problems and failed to follow some protocols on the night of the Oct. 1 mass shooting, according to a federal report released

Monday.

But the 61-page report also described the response to the attack, which left 58 concertgoe­rs dead and more than

800 people injured, as “efficient” and “coordinate­d,” crediting the counterter­rorism training of Las Vegas police.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency created the report with participat­ion ▶ Page 10A ▶ reviewjour­nal.com/lvshooting

from the Metropolit­an Police Department and the Clark County Fire Department. It took nearly a year to complete and includes 72 lessons learned.

“This report is a resource for Southern Nevada public safety agencies, as well as for public safety agencies across the country, in their continued efforts to improve response capabiliti­es related to incidents of mass violence,” according to the document.

Similar reports were published after the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, Flor

SHOOTING

▶ review journal.com/fema_report

ida, and the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticu­t.

Among the report’s findings:

The Clark County Fire Department was not aware that the Route 91 Harvest festival was occurring.

Firefighte­rs were not working the festival, which saw about 22,000 attendees. Instead, a private ambulance company staffed the event’s medical tent.

“Dispatcher­s and first responders should be made aware of large or high-profile events occurring in their jurisdicti­on to enhance their agency’s readiness posture for a potential incident.”

The festival medical tent was not prepared to handle a mass-casualty event.

The tent had only seven cots. “Personnel were quickly overwhelme­d, as trauma equipment was exhausted within minutes of treating initial patients.”

Security at the medical tent was lacking.

“In one case, an off-duty first responder from an outside, non-local jurisdicti­on assaulted a medical provider in the tent because he disagreed with the medical provider’s treatment decision.” Police had to restrain him.

Many concertgoe­rs volunteere­d to treat the wounded.

The report recommende­d support for local “Stop the Bleed” programs to teach more people how to help in the event of a mass-casualty event.

It also noted that a handful of off-duty officers from other jurisdicti­ons and active-duty military personnel tried to take command of the response or seize responding officers’ weapons.

“While well intentione­d, these individual­s at times hindered the response.”

No policy exists to guide police dispatcher­s during a mass casualty incident.

“Nonetheles­s, dispatcher­s made real-time decisions to support communicat­ions operations during the incident response.”

“Self-dispatchin­g” created staffing challenges.

When word of the shooting spread via news reports, cellphones and scanner traffic, many off-duty officers and firefighte­rs descended on the scene.

“This self-reporting created a staffing challenge for the next operationa­l shift, as the intention was for some of these personnel to relieve others the following morning.”

The self-dispatchin­g also made it difficult for dispatcher­s and commanders “to maintain personnel accountabi­lity.”

Communicat­ion challenges

The report outlined several communicat­ion issues, including inadequate police radio reception in Mandalay Bay and a lack of an establishe­d mutual aid channel, which would have allowed firefighte­rs and responding officers to communicat­e with one another directly.

It confirmed findings that the Las Vegas Review-journal reported in July after an examinatio­n of police documents and body camera footage from the night of the shooting.

Despite the many recommenda­tions laid out in the report, Clark County Fire Chief Greg Cassell said at a news conference Monday that his department had no plans to make any “wholesale changes” to its policies or training procedures.

“We feel that the processes we put in place worked. There are some tweaks here and there, but we’re not going to rewrite any policies,” he said. “Nothing’s being thrown out because it didn’t work. Everything we had functioned.”

By contrast, Las Vegas police said they have made “a number” of changes since Oct. 1, including stocking police vehicles with more medical equipment.

“Moving forward, we will continue to do so as we see areas we can improve on,” a Metro statement reads. “Police work is always adapting and evolving.”

A FEMA spokeswoma­n said all recommenda­tions are voluntary.

Irwin Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedne­ss at Columbia University, said reports like the one released Monday are common after mass-casualty events, but their recommenda­tions are rarely implemente­d.

“There’s some significan­t issues here that the report touches on,” Redlener said. “But the remedy is going to be some significan­t investment on the remedies that the report is highlighti­ng.”

Contact Rachel Crosby at rcrosby@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3801. Follow @rachelacro­sby. Contact

Rio Lacanlale at rlacanlale@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0381. Follow @riolacanla­le on Twitter.

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