The Columbus Dispatch

Report suggests changes after Vegas mass shooting

- By Ken Ritter

LAS VEGAS — Las Vegas police learned from the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history to secure high-rise buildings overseeing open-air crowds and train more officers with rifles to stop a shooter in an elevated position, Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo said.

Among 93 recommenda­tions in a newly released department “after-action review” are requiremen­ts to plan ahead with neighborin­g police, fire, hospital and coroner officials; to let responding officers remove reflective vests so they’re less of a target to a shooter; and to ensure more paramedics and trauma kits are available at large-scale events.

“We hope we never have to use these procedures that we are putting in place,” said Lombardo, who characteri­zed the report, released this past week, as “our textbook on our response” to the October 2017 massacre that killed 58 people at an open-air music festival on the Las Vegas Strip. He said it’s now required reading for every Las Vegas police officer above the rank of sergeant.

Lombardo noted that report authors Capt. Kelly Mcmahill and detective Stephanie Ward studied other mass casualty incidents across the country, and said he hoped the Las Vegas report will help others prepare.

The 158-page document acknowledg­es communicat­ions snags similar to those described in a separate August 2018 report by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Clark County Fire Department and Las Vegas police.

That 61-page document said communicat­ions were overwhelme­d by 911 calls, the number of victims, and by false reports of active shooters at other Las Vegas hotels and casinos and nearby Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport.

Lombardo, the elected head of some 5,000 officers, said the new report focuses on internal department “preparedne­ss, response and recovery.”

It comes almost a year after Las Vegas police closed the criminal investigat­ion with a 187-page report, and nearly six months after the FBI issued a three-page summary of its behavioral analysis of gunman Stephen Paddock.

Paddock, 64, a former accountant and high-stakes video poker player with homes in Reno and the southern Nevada resort community of Mesquite, killed himself before officers reached his hotel room.

The FBI said Paddock sought notoriety but that investigat­ors found no “single or clear motivating factor” for the shooting.

Investigat­ors said Paddock planned meticulous­ly and acted alone, amassing an arsenal of assault-style weapons before opening fire from a 32nd-floor suite at the Mandalay Bay resort onto a crowd of 22,000 country music fans below. Authoritie­s said more than 850 people were wounded or injured fleeing the gunfire.

Lombardo said policing changes in Las Vegas will apply to scheduled events drawing at least 15,000 people, and the report listed more than 17 such events: New Year’s Eve fireworks on the Strip; convention­s including the Consumer Electronic­s show at the Las Vegas Convention Center; NASCAR races at Las Vegas Speedway; the Las Vegas Rock ‘n’ Roll Marathon; uncounted hotel “day club” pool parties; and 41 NHL Vegas Golden Knights hockey home games per year at T-mobile Arena.

He also noted the NFL’S Oakland Raiders plan to move to Las Vegas and begin play in 2020 at a 65,000seat Las Vegas Stadium being built just off the Strip.

The release comes a week after Las Vegas police confirmed the firing in March of a veteran officer who froze in a Mandalay Bay hotel hallway, one floor below where Paddock was firing into the concert crowd.

Lombardo said an unspecifie­d number of other officers received lesser discipline for turning off or failing to activate bodyworn video cameras, and one for accidental­ly firing a three-round burst of gunfire inside Paddock’s suite.

Police union Executive Director Steve Grammas said the dismissed officer, Cordell Hendrex, was one of two officers discipline­d following department­al reviews of their actions during the shooting. The union is fighting to get Hendrex reinstated.

Grammas said the only other officer he knew of who had been discipline­d for actions during the mass shooting got his job back after an arbitrator reviewed his firing.

 ?? [THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] ?? FBI agents walk through all of the items left behind when concert-goers fled gunfire at a mass shooting that killed 58 people and injured hundreds in Las Vegas in 2017.
[THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] FBI agents walk through all of the items left behind when concert-goers fled gunfire at a mass shooting that killed 58 people and injured hundreds in Las Vegas in 2017.

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