The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

At least 59 dead, over 500 wounded in Las Vegas shooting

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LAS VEGAS — A gunman in a high-rise hotel overlookin­g the Las Vegas Strip opened fire on a country music festival late Sunday, killing at least 59 people and injuring hundreds of others in the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history.

The gunman, identified by police as Stephen Paddock, was later found dead by officers on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino, Sheriff Joseph Lombardo said during a news briefing Monday.

The massacre marked the nation’s latest outbreak of gunfire and bloodshed to erupt in a public place, again spreading terror in an American city transforme­d into a war zone. The carnage in Las Vegas surpassed the 49 people slain in June 2016 when a gunman in Orlando, who later said he was inspired by the Islamic State, opened fire inside a crowded nightclub.

Lombardo said investigat­ors could not immediatel­y identify a motive. He said 527 people were injured, though he did not specify how many were wounded by gunfire or injured in the chaos that followed. Clark County Fire Chief Greg Cassell said officials were seeing a “wide range” of injuries, including gunshot victims as well as people injured by shrapnel, trampling or getting hurt jumping fences attempting to escape.

Paddock, 64, was found dead in his hotel room by Las Vegas SWAT officers, police said. They believe Paddock, who had checked in Thursday and brought a cache of guns, took his own life in Room 135 before officers entered.

Under the neon glow and glitz of the Vegas Strip, thousands of concertgoe­rs who gathered for a three-day music festival dove for cover or raced toward shelter when the gunfire began about 10 p.m. Sunday. Police said more than 22,000 people were at the concert when Paddock began firing round after round, shooting from an elevated position that left those on the ground effectivel­y helpless.

Police described Paddock as a “lone wolf ” attacker. Lombardo did not give further details on Paddock’s background and possible motivation, saying police “have no idea what his belief system was.”

Authoritie­s found a small arsenal inside Paddock’s hotel room. Officers found about 20 firearms, according to people familiar with the case. One of the weapons he apparently used in the attack was an AK-47-style rifle, with a stand used to steady it for firing, these people said.

Lombardo said authoritie­s at the gunman’s home found more than 18 guns as well as explosives and “several thousand rounds of ammo,” along with unspecifie­d electronic devices they were evaluating.

Because Paddock was a high roller at the Vegas casinos, investigat­ors are also scouring his records to try to determine if he was facing financial strains, according to these people.

Relatives of Paddock’s said they were stunned by what happened. Paddock had retired and lived in Mesquite, Texas, for several years before moving to the Nevada town with the same name. Relatives described him as a quiet man, a licensed pilot who liked to gamble. His brother, Eric, said their mother spoke to the FBI.

“She said, ‘I don’t understand why my son did this,’” Eric Paddock said Monday morning outside his home in Orlando, Florida. While his brother had some handguns, Eric Paddock but was shocked by the weaponry police described in Las Vegas.

Eric Paddock said he did not know of his brother having any mental illness, alcohol or drug problems. When he spoke to the FBI, Eric Paddock said he showed FBI agents three years of text messages from his brother, including one mentioning winning $250,000 at a casino. Stephen Paddock played “high stakes video poker,” Eric said, adding that he did not have any informatio­n suggesting the 64-year-old gunman had gambling debts or financial issues.

Their father, Benjamin, was one of the FBI’s mostwanted fugitives decades ago, a convicted bank robber described in one wanted poster as “psychopath­ic” with suicidal tendencies. Eric Paddock told reporters their father, was not around much during their childhood.

In the initial chaotic aftermath of the shooting, authoritie­s sought a woman named Marilou Danley, described only as Paddock’s “traveling companion.” Lombardo said during a briefing that investigat­ors spoke with Danley, who was found outside the country, and do not believe she was involved in the shooting, though she remained a person of interest.

Her relationsh­ip with Stephen Paddock was not immediatel­y known, but they lived at the same address in Mesquite, Nevada, according to public records. Lombardo said police in Mesquite searched Paddock’s home on Monday.

On Monday President Donald Trump praised the “miraculous” speed with which local law enforcemen­t responded to the shooting, which he decried as an unfathomab­le attack on innocents gathered for a concert.

“It was an act of pure evil,” Trump said during remarks from the White House. “We cannot fathom their pain, we cannot imagine their loss.”

Trump ordered flags flown at half-staff and said he would visit Las Vegas on Wednesday.

Federal homeland security officials said there were no specific, credible threats to other public venues around the country, while federal agents headed to Las Vegas to support the local police leading the investigat­ion.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said it dispatched agents and began “conducting urgent traces on firearms” recovered after the shooting. FBI criminal investigat­ors — rather than those in the bureau’s National Security Branch - are also helping local police in the case, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for the attack on Monday in multiple messages through its Amaq News Agency. In the messages, the group said the shooter was one of its “soldiers” and had recently converted to Islam, according to the SITE Intelligen­ce Group, which tracks extremist groups.

The Islamic State, also known as ISIS, often claims responsibi­lity after such attacks, even in cases where it is unclear whether the group motivated them or was involved. Law enforcemen­t officials on Monday disputed the claims from ISIS.

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 ?? Chase Stevens / Associated Press ?? A wounded person is taken in a wheelbarro­w as police respond to a shooting on the Las Vegas Strip Sunday.
Chase Stevens / Associated Press A wounded person is taken in a wheelbarro­w as police respond to a shooting on the Las Vegas Strip Sunday.

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