Los Angeles Times

Vegas gunman was losing money

Sheriff gives new details about the life of Stephen Paddock.

- By David Montero david. montero @ latimes. com

LAS VEGAS — The man who shot hundreds and killed 58 at the Route 91 Harvest music festival a month ago was a narcissist who may have seen his image as a high- rolling gambler declining, Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo said as the investigat­ion into the Oct. 1 shooting rampage entered its second month.

“He was going through some bouts of depression. But he was status- driven,” Lombardo said in a widerangin­g interview with 8 News Now in Las Vegas that offered the first hints of what might have driven 64- yearold Stephen Paddock to open fire from the 32nd f loor of the Mandalay Bay hotel.

Paddock had been losing money for two years, Lombardo said, and had been showing signs of depression.

“Since September 2015, he’s lost a significan­t amount of wealth, and I think that might have been a determinin­g factor on what he was determined to do,” Lombardo said in his Wednesday night interview.

“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. So obviously that was starting to decline in the short period of time, and that may have had a determinin­g effect on why decided to do what he did,” the sheriff said.

“He was going in the wrong direction.”

Lombardo said investigat­ors still didn’t under- stand precisely what set Paddock off a little more than a year ago when he began stockpilin­g weapons and scouting locations around the country. Paddock fatally shot himself at the end of his 10- minute- long attack, and the hard drives that had been removed from the computers discovered in his room have not been found, the sheriff said.

Lombardo used the interview to try and set straight the initially confusing timelines offered by authoritie­s in the days after the shooting.

The chief questions have centered around the fact that Paddock was able to fire at the crowd opposite the hotel for a full 10 minutes, though a hotel security guard had been shot before the main shooting rampage began, and had reported it.

What happened was this, the sheriff said: The security guard, Jesus Campos, had been alerted that a room on the 32nd f loor had a door that had been held open for a long period of time. He found that the door to that f loor from the stairwell had been barricaded, and he radioed in to report that at 9: 59 p. m.

Campos, Lombardo said, then took the stairs to the 33rd f loor, exited, walked to the elevators and took one back down to the 32nd f loor. He was shot in the leg as he walked outside Paddock’s door.

“So subsequent­ly you have a couple minutes of him going up, going down the elevators and back down the hallway and then he encounters the suspect,” Lombardo said. “He receives a wound, he attempts to go through his radio and then he also confirms his communicat­ion with dispatch via cellphone.”

All the timelines have shown that Paddock opened f ire on the crowd at 10: 05 p. m. What time did Campos report that he had been shot? Police have never said, and Lombardo didn’t elaborate on that in the interview.

“We didn’t know shots were f ired until 10: 05 pm — 10: 04: 55 or something like that,” Lombardo said. “That’s when we actually determined — through calls for service, computer- aided dis- patch, body- worn cameras, other people’s observatio­ns through videos in Uber, taxis things like that — we feel pretty comfortabl­e in that the large amounts of f iring by the suspect occurred at 10: 05 p. m.”

Two Las Vegas Metropolit­an Police Department officers already were at the Mandalay Bay on another call and began working their way up the stairs as the shooting began. They also came across the barricaded stairwell door.

“So that was right around 10 minutes they were able to do that. So that’s pretty amazing in public- safety time you call dispatch, you get a revise, you formulate a plan, you ascend the stairwell, you have no idea what f loor it is, you’re receiving informatio­n from disparate directions, and then you encounter this blocked doorway — and that was right around 10 minutes,” Lombardo said.

“And then our other officers ascended via the elevator bank and came out into the foyer or hallway from the elevator bank there — right around 12 minutes. During that time, the suspect had stopped firing. And so when we don’t hear any firing taking place, then it becomes slow and methodical.”

By the time they entered his room, the gunman had shot himself. “I honestly believe that he believed the wolf was at the door — being us, LVMPD — and that is when he made the decision to take his life,” he said.

Paddock expended more than 1,000 rounds over the 10 minutes he fired, in what authoritie­s were able to identify as 12 bursts. The pauses between them, Lombardo said, could have resulted from jammed or faulty weapons or the need to replace clips as they were emptied.

Paddock made money on real estate investment­s and described himself as a profession­al gambler, though he had previously worked as a defense industry auditor. He often spent long hours playing video poker.

But Lombardo said Paddock had “gone up and down” in his wealth and had recently been losing money.

With so little still understood about Paddock’s motive, Lombardo confirmed that the gunman’s girlfriend, Marilou Danley, a former casino concierge who lived with him in Mesquite, Nev., continued to be interviewe­d and was still considered a “person of interest.”

 ?? John Locher Associated Press ?? I T’S BEEN A MONTH since the Las Vegas shooting, and investigat­ors are still trying to determine a motive.
John Locher Associated Press I T’S BEEN A MONTH since the Las Vegas shooting, and investigat­ors are still trying to determine a motive.

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