The Palm Beach Post

Sheriff: Financial losses depressed shooter

Lawman suggests status sense at play in Vegas massacre.

- By Michael Balsamo

The man who killed 58 people at a country music festival in Las Vegas last month had been depressed after losing a significan­t amount of money in the past two years and that may have been a “determinin­g factor” in the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history, the city’s sheriff said.

Stephen Paddock, a 64-year-old high-stakes gambler and real estate investor, had lost a “significan­t amount of wealth” since September 2015, which led to “bouts of depression,” Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo said in an interview this week with Las Vegas news station KLAS-TV.

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

Investigat­ors still have not determined exactly what led Paddock to unleash a barrage of gunfire at concertgoe­rs from his high-rise suite at the Mandalay Bay hotel and casino Oct. 1.

Paddock killed himself after the massacre that also wounded more than 500 people. Las Vegas police and the FBI have examined his politics, any possible radicaliza­tion and his social behavior but turned up little.

Investigat­ors have found that Paddock planned his attack meticulous­ly and was “purposeful in concealing his actions,” the sheriff said.

The gunman requested an upper-floor room overlookin­g the Route 91 Harvest Festival; stockpiled 23 guns, a dozen of them modified to fire continuous­ly like automatic weapons; and set up cameras inside and outside his room to watch for approachin­g officers.

One of the laptops found in Paddock’s hotel suite was missing a hard drive, and searches of his internet history turned up nothing unusual.

Investigat­ors found no evidence that Paddock had help carrying out the attack but are continuing to question his girlfriend, who was visiting family members in the Philippine­s during the massacre.

Marilou Danley is still considered a “person of interest” in the investigat­ion and was being questioned again this week, Lombardo said. The FBI previously questioned her about Paddock’s gun purchases and what she may have noticed about his behavior.

Danley has repeatedly denied knowing anything about the attack and said Paddock never said or did anything that would have led her to believe he was going to carry out a massacre.

But the sheriff said he had doubts about her story, calling it “hard to believe.”

“You would think Ms. Danley would have some informatio­n associated with that,” Lombardo said. “Currently, we haven’t been able to pull it out of her, if she has it in her.”

The sheriff also described Paddock’s younger brother, Eric, as “manic” in interviews with news reporters outside his Florida home following the shooting.

“You can see there’s something associated with the family,” Lombardo said without elaboratin­g.

A second brother, Bruce Paddock, was arrested in Los Angeles on Oct. 25 on suspicion of possessing child pornograph­y.

In the wide-ranging twopart interview, the sheriff said he believed Stephen Paddock was able to carry the guns into the hotel unnoticed by bringing them in separate bags over several days.

He said Paddock was known among casino staff and nothing appeared unusual.

It comes as several news organizati­ons, including The Associated Press, have sued to seek 911 calls, police camera video and search warrants related to the shooting.

Spokeswome­n for the Las Vegas Metropolit­an Police Department and the FBI declined to comment Friday.

 ??  ?? Stephen Paddock suffered financial setbacks, police say.
Stephen Paddock suffered financial setbacks, police say.

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