Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

2nd time in 2 years: ‘Active shooter’

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LAS VEGAS — He was running, lungs burning, across the casino floor of the Luxor — leaving his friends behind in a mad, desperate sprint toward the massacre.

It’s happening thought.

J.C. Monticone had just gotten a text message from his fiancee Sunday night. It was the same two words he’d heard from her on Dec. 2, 2015, when Melissa Castruita was working at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, Calif.

“Active shooter,” the read.

He ran past people gambling and drinking as if the world were normal. It contradict­ed everything he knew in his head at that moment. Life and death were happening outside. How could these two worlds exist simultaneo­usly?

Castruita was crouched down in the VIP area near the stage across the street from Luxor when she texted Monticone. She, her aunt and her cousin had been singing along with country star Jason Aldean when bullets came pouring down from the 32nd flood of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino some 500 yards away.

“I’m so scared!! Do you hear that? They took jason Aldean’s off stage,” she texted to Monticone.

Castruita used to tell her family that after her worksite was shot up by two people in the San Bernardino attack nearly two years ago, she was the safest person to be around because, well, nobody is present for a second mass shooting.

Her phone rang. It was Monticone. Over the phone he heard more gunshots. again, he text Screaming. He reached the doors of the Luxor and realized he could hear gunfire on his own.

“I’m coming told her.

“No, go up and barricade she said.

Monticone saw the tinted glass door open and a man and woman came toward him as he spoke to Castruita.

“They’re just rubber bullets,” the man told Monticone in a rote, dazed voice.

Blood stained the young man’s shirt and pants. Monticone thought some shrapnel had hit him, but wasn’t sure. The woman said he was her son and that his friend had been shot next to him. The friend was likely dead.

Monticone, a 36-year-old paramedic with the South Pasadena Fire Department, carried him to a bench with his friend, who had caught up with him after his sprint. He handed the phone to his friend and tried to help the man. He also needed to get to you,” he

to the room yourself in,” to Castruita. He struggled with what to do. “The hardest decision I’ve ever had to make in my life,” he said.

He told Castruita he was helping someone and that he would find her. Don’t lose your phone, he told her. I will find you. Then he went to work. Castruita had been celebratin­g her 34th birthday, and this was the second Route 91 Harvest Festival she attended. She’d seen her favorite country act, Sam Hunt, on Saturday night and was excited to see Aldean’s set.

The tickets were VIP, but after a late night of partying Saturday, they had arrived later than planned and missed out on nabbing seats in the outdoor arena. Her aunt and cousin moved off to the left of the stage and even considered going to the pit area.

It was crowded, though, and ever since her experience in with the San Bernardino shooting, Castruita had been skittish in crowds.

That day in 2015 hung over her and haunted her. She remembered driving to the Inland Regional Center on Dec. 2., after the gunfire started. She remembered the terror of knowing people had been shot and killed at the site where she worked. Helicopter­s buzzed overhead. Police in tactical gear were everywhere.

A week after the San Bernardino shooting, nobody could go back into the building, so Castruita and Monticone decided to go to Disneyland. The crowds spooked her, however, and they left.

But for this year’s Route 91 Harvest Festival, she felt OK and had settled into feeling more at ease. Then came the shots. The police in tactical gear. The helicopter­s.

She had confidence that Morticone would stay safe. But she knew he would be worried about her — just like he was on Dec. 2 when he drove 95 mph on the freeway from Santa Clarita to get her in San Bernardino after she told him there had been a shooting and the killers were still on the loose.

Castruita wondered if the killers were still on the loose in Las Vegas.

The casino area in Luxor had gotten quiet and the young man in shock was trembling.

“Shooter!” yelled.

Manticone looked up and saw a few hundred people streaming through the doors. The woman helped her son up and started to run and fell. Monticone thought she might get trampled and helped her up. Her phone flew and he saw the caller ID on it said “Husband.” He grabbed it for her and then they took off.

When Monticone turned around, a shirtless man in a cowboy hat staggered at him. He was bleeding profusely above the eye and around his mouth. With no first aid equipment, Monticone rushed to the bathroom to get some towels. someone Press it against the wound to stem the bleeding, he told him.

Then Morticone rushed out the Luxor and called his fiancee again.

Along with her aunt and cousin, Castruita had helped other concert-goers rip down an aluminum wall of the VIP section to escape toward the Tropicana Hotel and Casino.

Her phone rang. Morticone was still OK. So was she, she said. He was near the Tropicana too. They could try to meet at the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino.

She heard him say he had to go. Another person needed help. They hung up.

Manticone helped carry a woman with a gunshot wound in her leg to a triage center already set up on Las Vegas Boulevard. He was a paramedic, Manticone said, and got her an IV before seeing ambulances arriving one after the other.

“I needed to get to Melissa,” he said as he left the woman with paramedics.

He rushed past some police, into the MGM and started down an escalator. He wondered how hard it would be to find her. He called her again. She said she was near an escalator at the MGM.

Then she saw him coming down the escalator. They hugged just like they had when he raced from his parents’ home in Santa Clarita in 2015.

Montionce’s clothes, his arms and hands were covered with blood.

He ducked into the restroom to quickly wash it off when he heard what he thought were gunshots. Castruita had heard them too and instinctiv­ely, began to run with her aunt and cousin. But then she stopped and looked for Monticone.

He bolted out of the restroom and saw her. And they escaped.

Together again.

 ?? IRFAN KHAN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? J.C. Monticone shows texts he received from Melissa Castruita in Las Vegas. She was also in the San Bernardino attack.
IRFAN KHAN/LOS ANGELES TIMES J.C. Monticone shows texts he received from Melissa Castruita in Las Vegas. She was also in the San Bernardino attack.

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