Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Normal’ Paddock seen in MGM video

Released images show no signs of what was to come

- By Wade Tyler Millward Las Vegas Review-journal

MGM Resorts released surveillan­ce video on Thursday of Stephen Paddock, the man behind the Oct. 1 shooting, showing the days and hours before he fired upon a concert crowd from his room inside Mandalay Bay.

In one hour and

17 minutes of footage,

Paddock, 64, behaves like any other high roller staying on the Strip. He plays video poker. Employees warmly greet him. He sits at a bar and sticks close to the bellhops who brought his luggage inside.

Inside that luggage — over 20 firearms and thousands of rounds of ammunition to shoot at concertgoe­rs at the Route 91 Harvest music festival on Oct. 1.

VIDEO reviewjour­nal. com/paddockvid­eo ▶ reviewjour­nal.com/lvshooting

Paddock killed 58 people and wounded hundreds more before he shot himself to death as officers closed in, police say.

“In the interest of providing greater context around Stephen Paddock’s actions in the days leading up to October 1, MGM Resorts has released these security videos and images,” MGM Resorts Internatio­nal spokeswoma­n Debra Deshong said in a statement. “As the security footage demonstrat­es, Stephen Paddock gave no indication of what he planned to do and his interactio­ns with staff and overall behavior were all normal.

“MGM and Mandalay Bay could not reasonably foresee that a longtime guest with no known history of threats or violence and behaving in a manner that appeared outwardly normal, would carry out such an inexplicab­ly evil, violent and deadly act.

“Our focus continues to be on supporting victims and their families, our guests and employees, and cooperatin­g with law enforcemen­t with their ongoing investigat­ion,” she said.

32 pieces of video

MGM released the security footage in 32 videos, one as long as 34 minutes, another as short as 17 seconds. The company also released about a dozen still images of Paddock checking into Mandalay Bay on Sept. 25 and interactin­g with staff.

He left the hotel multiple times over the next few days.

The Ogden, a condominiu­m in downtown Las Vegas where the gunman rented a room through Airbnb during the Life is Beautiful music festival on Sept. 22-24, turned over security footage of Paddock to law enforcemen­t, spokeswoma­n Melissa Warren said.

The Ogden retained no copies of the footage, she said.

Julie Craig, who survived the Oct. 1 shooting, wasn’t upset with MGM for releasing the video and doesn’t believe the company did anything wrong.

What upset Craig, who worked the Route 91 concert as a vendor, was seeing the gunman placidly prepare for his horrific act.

“Watching him so calm, knowing he was going to kill so many innocent people,” she said. “My hairs stood up on my arm as I watched him.”

Varied views of the release

Willy Allison, founder of the World Game Protection Conference for casino security, said MGM should release all Paddock footage to add context to his movements.

Though the clips MGM released show Paddock behaving normally, Mandalay Bay staffers still could have

missed warning signs, something that might be apparent in other footage, Allison said.

“A small sample of video snippets might appease the public and press,” he said. “But it doesn’t tell the whole story.”

Hotel marketing specialist Brenda Fields said the release of the video is an early move by MGM Resorts, which owns not only the Mandalay Bay but also the concert venue Paddock targeted, to rebuild public trust.

“Full disclosure by the hotel, coupled with a policy to identify questionab­le behavior or actions, would go a long way to assure its guests that they are dedicated to safety,” said Fields, whose Fields & Co. consultanc­y is based in Millerton, New York.

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HOPE AND HEALING

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