Orlando Sentinel

Las Vegas remembers

- By Ken Ritter

A flock of doves flutter skyward at sunrise in Las Vegas, each bird bearing a leg band with the name of one of the 58 people slain.

LAS VEGAS — A flock of doves fluttered skyward at sunrise Monday in Las Vegas, each bird bearing a leg band with the name of one of the 58 people slain in the deadliest mass shooting in the nation’s modern history one year ago.

Marking the anniversar­y of the night a gunman opened fire from a highrise casino suite on a crowd of 22,000 country music fans, Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval gathered with several hundred people at an outdoor amphitheat­er remembranc­e ceremony.

“Today we remember the unforgetta­ble. Today, we comfort the inconsolab­le,” Sandoval told survivors, families of victims, first responders and elected officials who gathered at dawn.

He added: “Today, we are reminded of the pain that never really goes away.”

Among those who offered prayers, songs and speeches was Mynda Smith, whose sister Neysa Davis Tonks was killed.

Smith said her sister was a 46-year-old single mother raising three boys in Las Vegas. Smith called her sister energetic, adventurou­s, a fan of all kinds of music and a person who danced when no one was watching.

Smith started a scholarshi­p fund for victims’ children and said she reached out to loved ones of almost all the dead.

“None of us will ever be the same,” she said. “We have all changed. We have all been broken. But we can find a way to pick up those pieces and glue it all back together. Yes, the cracks will be seen. But it can be whole again and we will be stronger.”

Shooting survivors Chris and Larisa Rapanick, of Chesapeake, Va., made the trip to Las Vegas for weekend events including a 5K run, a country music club show and a reunion of survivors Saturday. At the sunrise service, they stood with their two adult daughters.

“We weren’t going to let this ruin a place we like to come to,” Chris Rapanick said. “I’m glad to be standing here.”

Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo recalled the chaos and confusion of the shooting, and the prayers to “heal broken hearts,” blood banks filled with donors and “acts of kindness that comforted the suffering” that followed.

“When the sun rose the next morning, grief turned to anger, anger turned to resolve and resolve turned to action,” Lombardo said.

Many who were cheering Jason Aldean’s headline set on at the Route 91 Harvest Festival late Oct. 1, 2017 , said later they thought the rapid crack-crack-crack they heard was fireworks — until people fell dead, wounded, bleeding.

From across neon-lit Las Vegas Boulevard, a gambler-turned-gunman with what police later called a meticulous plan but an unknown reason fired assault-style rifles for 11 minutes from 32nd-floor windows of the Mandalay Bay hotel into the concert crowd below. Police said he then put a pistol in his mouth and killed himself.

Lombardo declared the police investigat­ion over in August, issuing a report that said hundreds of interviews and thousands of hours of investigat­ive work could not provide answers to what made Stephen Craig Paddock unleash his hail of gunfire.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER/AP ?? California­ns Linda Hazelwood, from left, Michelle Hamel and Jann Blake attend a prayer service Monday in Las Vegas. The three attended the country music festival last year.
JOHN LOCHER/AP California­ns Linda Hazelwood, from left, Michelle Hamel and Jann Blake attend a prayer service Monday in Las Vegas. The three attended the country music festival last year.

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