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Las Vegas gunman fired on guard and crowd at about same time - MGM


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Las Vegas gunman fired on guard and crowd at about same time - MGM

By Keith Coffman

 

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Workers board up a broken window at the Mandalay Bay hotel, where shooter Stephen Paddock conducted his mass shooting along the Las Vegas Strip, in Las Vegas, Nevada, October 6, 2017. REUTERS/Chris Wattie

 

(Reuters) - The owner of the hotel where a gunman carried out the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history on Thursday provided a new version of the timeline, suggesting there was no time for hotel staff to warn police.

 

Stephen Paddock opened fire on Mandalay Bay hotel security guard Jesus Campos and the crowd attending an outdoor concert nearby at the same time, or within 40 seconds of each other, MGM Resorts International said in a statement.

 

Police have still not determined a motive for the shooting.

 

MGM's account differed from the updated timeline Las Vegas police provided on Monday, when they said Campos had been shot six minutes before Paddock opened fire on the crowd from his 32nd-floor suite and killed 58 people on Oct. 1. MGM said on Tuesday the revised police timeline might not be accurate.

 

A Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department spokesman, Officer Larry Hadfield, said the police would have no immediate comment on the hotel's latest statement. The Las Vegas office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation could not immediately be reached for comment.

 

Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo, who oversees the Las Vegas police department, on Wednesday defended the speed of the police response in an interview with the Las Vegas CBS television affiliate.

 

"No matter what that timeline was, the response was as quick as possible. I don't think the response could have been any faster," Lombardo said in a video posted on the station's LasVegasNow.com website.

 

The revised timeline police provided on Monday raised new questions, including why Paddock ceased firing on concert-goers once he began, and whether hotel security and police coordinated as well as first believed.

 

MGM said the 9:59 p.m. time that police said is when Campos was shot was derived from a hotel report created manually after the fact without the benefit of information the hotel now has.

 

"We are now confident that the time stated in this report is not accurate," MGM said. "We know that shots were being fired at the festival lot at the same time as, or within 40 seconds after, the time Jesus Campos first reported that shots were fired over the radio."

 

Las Vegas police officers were with armed hotel security officers in the building when Campos, who was checking an open-door alarm also on the 32nd floor, first reported that shots were fired over the radio, MGM said. Both groups immediately responded to the 32nd floor.

 

The police have said they assembled a SWAT team and burst into Paddock's room to find him dead 81 minutes after the shooting began.

 

"We will continue to work with law enforcement as we have from the first moments of this tragedy as they work toward developing an accurate timeline," MGM said.

 

MGM's new timeline is a blow to lawyers representing some of the victims, whose claims depend heavily on the hotel's allegedly delayed response following the shooting of Campos. A lawsuit filed in Nevada state court on Tuesday on behalf of a California woman injured in the shooting alleged the hotel acted negligently by responding too late.

 

Neama Rahmani, a Los Angeles lawyer representing some of the victims, said in an email on Thursday that MGM may have acted quickly, "but the question of whether reasonable precautions were in place remains."

 

(Reporting by Keith Coffman in Denver; Additional reporting by Tina Bellon in New York; Writing by Ben Klayman,; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Leslie Adler)

 
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-- © Copyright Reuters 2017-10-13
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This timeline matter is all about the bottom feeder lawyers bringing lawsuits.  The goal of the lawyers is to find any kind of issue to sue somebody.  With lawyers looking for fault in hotel security, we all will surely in the future,  be facing metal detectors and scanners going to hotels. Then it will be all concerts, movie theaters, supermarkets and shopping malls.  This will be the future, not for security but for fear of lawsuits.

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I suspect the shooter took golf bags with his rifles to the room in a series of trips from where ever he was storing them at. In Vegas there are lots of people who go there

to play golf in the day and party and gamble at night. Hope the hotel staff keep a better eye on guests who have too many pieces of luggage with them in the future.

Geezer

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7 hours ago, Trouble said:

This timeline matter is all about the bottom feeder lawyers bringing lawsuits.  The goal of the lawyers is to find any kind of issue to sue somebody.  With lawyers looking for fault in hotel security, we all will surely in the future,  be facing metal detectors and scanners going to hotels. Then it will be all concerts, movie theaters, supermarkets and shopping malls.  This will be the future, not for security but for fear of lawsuits.

Only if you live in gun crazy USA. Kick out the NRA.

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