Las Vegas Review-Journal

Wait for details may be long

- By Gary Martin Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Questions loom about what drove heavy gambler Stephen Paddock to carry out his diabolical plot and fire into a crowd of concertgoe­rs, killing 58 people and injuring hundreds more.

An intensive investigat­ion continues, but the answers to the many questions about the tragic Oct. 1 mass shooting may not be known for months or years.

Just this week, the FBI released documents about the horrific Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticu­t — some five years after the massacre happened.

Details in the FBI records in

SANDY HOOK

cluded a warning to law enforcemen­t about Adam Lanza, who shot his mother on Dec. 14, 2012, before he walked into the Sandy Hook school and methodical­ly gunned down 20 first-graders and six educators.

There are similariti­es to the mass shootings in Newtown and Las Vegas.

Both Lanza and Paddock planned the crimes down to the most critical detail. Lanza used spreadshee­ts to map previous mass murders. Paddock was interested in bullet trajectori­es and surveillan­ce outside his Mandalay Bay hotel room.

Both took their lives before they could be apprehende­d.

But Lanza was 20 and had Asperger’s syndrome. He was socially awkward and rarely ventured outdoors, reports show. Paddock, 64, had no known severe mental condition, functioned in social settings and was seen publicly in casinos throughout Nevada, according to the Metropolit­an Police Department.

Although there are “a lot of similariti­es” between the killers, one difference that stands out in the Las Vegas attack is the use of a sniper’s nest to carry out the mass shooting, retired FBI special agent Keith Tolhurst said.

Many active shooters who commit mass murder are close to their victims, like in Sandy Hook, Columbine in Colorado and the Virginia Tech shooting in Blacksburg, Virginia, Tolhurst said.

‘Just a loner’

In the case of Las Vegas, there is little evidence to suggest why Paddock committed the crime.

“It’s usually something that has pushed them over the edge,” Tolhurst said. “This guy is just a loner. You may never know why he did it.”

Tolhurst, of Phoenix, was part of the FBI tactical team that was called in after Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-ariz., was shot in the head on Jan. 8, 2011, in a grocery store parking lot where she was meeting with constituen­ts near Tucson.

Giffords recovered from the head wound, but six others were killed, including a federal judge.

Jared Lee Loughner, 22, was arrested

and charged with the planned assassinat­ion. Initially found incompeten­t to stand trial, Loughner later pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life in prison in 2012.

It was a fairly open-and-shut case. The time frame of an investigat­ion is difficult to predict, according to former FBI agents and Justice Department officials, who said painstakin­g measures must be taken to collect, protect and analyze evidence.

In Las Vegas, “the size of the crime scene is just incredible,” Tolhurst said. “That has to be sorted out.”

Much of the evidence in Las Vegas will be sent to the FBI laboratory in Quantico, Virginia, where investigat­ors will re-create the crime, match bullets to weapons and analyze all video and surveillan­ce evidence collected.

Nevada’s congressio­nal delegation said it will offer resources if necessary. But members want the investigat­ion to take its course without interferen­ce.

“I’ve been in law enforcemen­t long enough to know you can’t put a time frame on anything,” said Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-nev., a former Nevada attorney general and former federal prosecutor with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Washington.

Cortez Masto said law enforcemen­t agents, “both local and federal, are working as hard as they can to make sure they do a thorough investigat­ion.”

Unfazed by the five-year span between the Newtown shooting and the release of FBI records last week, Cortez Masto said law enforcemen­t, when it is ready, “will release the informatio­n without having to be concerned about impacting the integrity of any investigat­ion.”

Sandy Hook probe

The Sandy Hook investigat­ion began with a flurry of “forensic work with weapons,” Todd Jones, the acting director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives told the Senate Judiciary Committee just months following the attack.

At Sandy Hook, the ATF and the

FBI assisted the local police and the Connecticu­t State Police, which led the investigat­ion.

The state police released a report a year after the massacre. It noted that Lanza was in denial about his Asperger’s syndrome and would not take his medication.

Last week, the newly released FBI files contained informatio­n that local law enforcemen­t was warned of Lanza’s murderous plans before the shooting. A man said Lanza had told him of his intent and had previously reported it to the Newtown police.

The FBI files, containing mostly redacted grand jury subpoenas and interviews, also reveal an online relationsh­ip between Lanza and a woman who was privvy to his obsession with mass murder and called Lanza the “weirdest person online.”

Lanza destroyed the hard drive on his computer before committing the crime.

Meanwhile, Las Vegas law enforcemen­t officials are seeking the hard drive from Paddock’s computer, officials have told news outlets.

A computer hard drive would give law enforcemen­t a window into Paddock’s life to better track his history, Tolhurst said.

“What you are looking for is things on social media. A lot of times, hard drives give you photos or informatio­n,” he said.

The FBI is also collecting cellphone photos and videos and other electronic evidence before and after the shooting to piece together what occurred before Paddock pulled the trigger.

Investigat­ors will go through every detail and sort through everything to match it up temporally. For those eager for new clues, the wait may be frustratin­g.

“A lot of this takes time,” Tolhurst said. Asked about the lack of new public informatio­n, he said: “They may have nothing new to report.”

On Capitol Hill, a flurry of gun control measures were filed after the Las Vegas shooting. But no hearings on the gun bills have been scheduled, nor has any investigat­ion oversight.

Cortez Masto said she wants to see the results of the evidence.

“I want to have an understand­ing of what happened,” she said.

Once the investigat­ion is completed, Cortez Masto said, she will look to see whether additional federal legislatio­n is needed to prevent “what happened in Las Vegas from ever happening again.”

Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

 ?? Jessica Hill ?? The Associated Press White roses with the faces of victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting are attached to a telephone pole near the school in Newtown, Conn. on Jan. 14, 2013.
Jessica Hill The Associated Press White roses with the faces of victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting are attached to a telephone pole near the school in Newtown, Conn. on Jan. 14, 2013.

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