Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ammo seller gets year-plus sentence

Haig sold bullets to Strip massacre gunman

- By David Ferrara Las Vegas Review-journal

An Arizona man was sentenced Tuesday in Las Vegas to 13 months in prison for selling illegally manufactur­ed ammunition to the Route 91 Harvest festival gunman.

Douglas Haig, 57, of Mesa, pleaded guilty in November to a federal charge of manufactur­ing ammunition without a license in what was the only criminal case to stem from the Las Vegas massacre. He has until Oct. 2 to surrender.

Senior U.S. District Judge James Mahan imposed the sentence but said Federal Bureau of Prisons officials will have the discretion to decide whether Haig may serve some of the time at home.

The judge made sure to separate Haig’s punishment from the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.

“The person who did that, who committed that reprehensi­ble act, we can only hope now that he’s being punished for eternity,” Mahan said. “He’s escaped punishment on this Earth.”

Gun show meeting

Haig told the judge that he continues to be haunted by his encounter with the shooter, Stephen Paddock, whom he first met at a Phoenix gun show.

Haig remembered gloves worn inside-out as “one weird thing he did,” and he said Paddock was without “nervous tics,” was well-groomed and wore creased jeans, never hinting at his plan of terror.

The defendant admitted to selling ille

gally manufactur­ed rounds to Paddock ahead of the Oct. 1, 2017, attack, which initially left 58 people dead and hundreds more injured. The gunman opened fire on the crowd from a Mandalay Bay suite across the street before fatally shooting himself.

A 59th shooting victim died in November in California.

“The thought of being associated with Paddock is sickening to me,” Haig said. “What makes it even harder is that if I had not been illegally manufactur­ing ammunition, I never would have met him.”

Inside Paddock’s suite, investigat­ors allegedly found ammunition with reloading tool marks packed into an Amazon shipping box that listed Haig’s address.

They also found ammunition that Haig sold to Paddock loaded into five rifles and one magazine in the suite, according to court records. Haig’s attorney has said none of those rounds were fired during the attack.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Tony

Lopez, who appeared at Tuesday’s hearing by videoconfe­rence, asked the judge to sentence Haig to 21 months behind bars, arguing that

Haig continued to minimize his illegal conduct.

Federal investigat­ors interviewe­d Haig shortly after the shooting, and prosecutor­s in 2018 charged him in connection with the sales. They never accused Haig of having any prior knowledge of Paddock’s plans.

Lawyers debated whether the ammunition Haig manufactur­ed was “armor-piercing,” which is prohibited by federal law, and the judge ultimately decided that it was.

“What is crystal clear is that this ammunition is incredibly dangerous,” Lopez said.

Forever linked to gunman

Defense attorney Andrew Marcantel argued that Haig was “scrupulous­ly safety-oriented” when he made bullets, yet he would be linked to “the deplorable actions of Stephen Paddock for the rest of his life.”

Before the attack, Haig had been working as an engineer at Honeywell in Arizona while operating a personal ammunition business, Specialize­d Military Ammunition, out of a workshop at his home. Through the business, he sold personally manufactur­ed ammunition both online and at gun shows, including at least one in Nevada.

It was through Specialize­d Military

Ammunition that Paddock purchased ammunition from Haig.

Haig shuttered his ammunition business on Oct. 19, 2017, about two weeks after the attack, and the prosecutor said Haig initially lied to federal agents about his interactio­ns with Paddock.

Lopez argued that Haig “made incredibly dangerous ammunition available to anyone around the country” and “ignored the dangers in the pursuit of profit.”

As part of Haig’s plea, his inventory of more than 600 pounds of various ammunition and ammunition components became subject to government forfeiture. His felony plea means he will not be allowed to own a gun, under both Arizona and federal law.

Sometime in September, Marcantel and fellow defense attorney Marc Victor are expected to ask the judge to consider the status of the coronaviru­s pandemic before Haig is scheduled to start serving his sentence. The lawyers said prison could leave him susceptibl­e to serious illness or death from COVID-19.

Contact David Ferrara at dferrara@reviewjour­nal.com or 702380-1039. Follow @randompoke­r on Twitter.

 ?? Severiano del Castillo Galvan Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Douglas Haig, right, appears in federal court for sentencing Tuesday. Haig sold ammunition to the Route 91 Harvest festival gunman. He has until Oct. 2 to surrender.
Severiano del Castillo Galvan Las Vegas Review-journal Douglas Haig, right, appears in federal court for sentencing Tuesday. Haig sold ammunition to the Route 91 Harvest festival gunman. He has until Oct. 2 to surrender.
 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? Attorney Marc Victor, left, walks out of the Lloyd George U.S. Courthouse on Tuesday with his client Douglas Haig after Haig ’s sentencing on a charge of manufactur­ing ammunition without a license.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images Attorney Marc Victor, left, walks out of the Lloyd George U.S. Courthouse on Tuesday with his client Douglas Haig after Haig ’s sentencing on a charge of manufactur­ing ammunition without a license.

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