The Palm Beach Post

Police: Guard was shot prior to rampage

Six minutes elapsed before gunman fired on crowd, police say.

- By Matt Pearce, David Montero and Richard Winton Los Angeles Times

LAS VEGAS — Police have dramatical­ly changed their account of how the Las Vegas massacre began Oct. 1, revealing Monday that the gunman shot a hotel security guard six minutes before opening fire on a country music concert — raising new questions about why police weren’t able to pinpoint the gunman’s location sooner.

Officials had previously said that gunman Stephen Paddock, 64, of Mesquite, Nev., shot Mandalay Bay security guard Jesus Campos after Paddock had unleashed his deadly volley at the Route 91 Harvest country music festival, an assault that began at 10:05 p.m.

Officials had previously credited Campos, who was shot in the leg, with stopping the 10-minute assault on the concert crowd by turning the gunman’s attention to the hotel hallway, where Campos was checking an alert for an open door in another guest’s room.

But Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo said Monday that Paddock shot Campos before his mass shooting — at 9:59 p.m. — and they now don’t know why Paddock stopped his attack on the crowd.

Paddock, who had placed security cameras outside his room, shot Campos through the door of his suite, which was outfitted with a camera to survey the hallway, as was a room service cart parked outside. Police have said that Paddock fired 200 rounds into the hallway.

Investigat­ors previously said that the security guard was shot after Paddock had already spent 10 minutes firing into the crowd of concertgoe­rs gathered below the hotel.

In a timeline released last week, investigat­ors said Paddock had stopped firing at the concert across the street at 10:15 p.m., and the first police officers arrived on the floor at 10:17 p.m. and encountere­d the wounded Campos at 10:18 p.m., who directed the officers to Paddock’s suite.

Police were not in a hurry to enter Paddock’s suite because the security guard’s arrival had halted the shooting, police implied in previously describing the timeline.

But on Monday, the timeline changed.

“Mr. Campos was encountere­d by the suspect prior to his shooting to the outside world,” Lombardo said at a Monday news conference.

Police officers who started searching the hotel after the shooting began didn’t know a hotel security guard had been shot “until they met him in the hallway after exiting the elevator,” Lombardo said.

Charles “Sid” Heal, a retired Los Angeles County sheriff’s commander and tactical expert, said the new timeline “changes the whole perspectiv­e of the shooting.”

Heal said that if police had known immediatel­y that a guard had been shot, they would have rushed the room while the gunman was still firing. He said it seemed to signal a breakdown in communicat­ion.

“It doesn’t say much for hotel security,” Heal said.

Representa­tives for the Mandalay Bay hotel casino and the union representi­ng Mandalay Bay’s security guards did not immediatel­y respond to messages seeking comment.

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