A gunman killed at least 50 people and wounded more than 400 when he opened fi re on a country music concert in Las Vegas Sunday in the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history. Police said the gunman, a 64-year-old Nevada resident identifi ed as Stephen Paddock, had been killed after a SWAT team responded to reports of multiple gunfi re from the 32nd fl oor of the Mandalay Bay, a hotel-casino next to the concert venue. Concert-goers screamed and fl ed in panic as a steady stream of automatic gunfi re rang out at the venue shortly after 10:00 pm local time (0500 GMT Monday), footage captured on smart phones showed.
“We are looking at in excess of 50 individuals dead and of 200 individuals injured at this point,” Las Vegas Metro Police Sheriff Joseph Lombardo told a pre-dawn press conference on Monday in the Nevada gambling hub. Lombardo said that police and FBI were still looking into Paddock’s background but they had “located numerous fi rearms within the room that he occupied” in the hotel.
Police said Paddock, who lived in a town around 80 miles northeast (130 kilometers) of Las Vegas, had opened fi re on the crowds below from the upper reaches of the giant hotel located on the famous Las Vegas Strip. Paddock’s female companion, who had earlier been named as a person of interest by police, is believed to have been located, Lombardo added.
Th ousands of fans were attending the concert next to the Mandalay Bay as part of a three-day country music festival known as Route 91. Donald Trump was briefed on the “horrifi c tragedy”, the White House said, and the US president took to Twitter to off er his “warmest condolences and sympathies” to victims and families. ‘Like fi recrackers’ – Witnesses told how Paddock opened fi re with an initial long burst, and then appeared to reload as he continued his spree.
“We heard (what) sounded like a glass breaking, so you looked around to see what’s going on and then heard a pop, pop, pop,” Monique Dekerf told CNN. “You’d think for a moment okay we’re fi ne, there’s no more gunfi re, then it starts again.” Like us on: facebook: blueprint.ng twitter: @blueprintngr instagram: @blueprintNigeria Her sister Rachel said it sounded like “the shots were coming from the right side … it sounded like they were right beside us too … it was right there.
” Best-selling country singer Jason Aldean was on stage and near the end of his concert when the shooting began. Aldean initially carried on playing when the fi rst crackle of gunfi re could be heard but then hurried off the stage once he realized that it was a shooting. Robert Hayes, a fi refi ghter from Los Angeles who was watching the concert near the front of the stage, said he fi rst thought the gunfi re was some kind of equipment malfunction. Once he realized what was going on, he joined the fi rst responders, donning one of their vests.
“Honestly I probably pronounced 15-20 people” dead, he told Fox News. “It was pretty much like a war scene inside.” Th e emergency crews used anything to hand as makeshift stretchers, including tables and metal railings normally used to control the crowds, said Hayes. Asked if he thought it was an inexperienced gunman, he responded: “With 30,000 people in the arena area, it was kind of like shooting goldfi sh …
He didn’t have to be good.” Beyond horrifi c’ – Although the fi nal toll has yet to be confi rmed, it is already the deadliest shooting in the United States. Th e previous deadliest shooting came in June 2016 when 49 people were killed at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida. It was also the latest in a series of recent deadly attacks at concert venues. Twenty-two people were killed while leaving an Ariana Grande concert in the northern English city of Manchester in May when a suicide bomber detonated a nail bomb in the foyer.
Ninety people were killed in November 2015 at the Bataclan venue in Paris during a concert by the US band the Eagles of Death Metal. A shocked Aldean told his fans via Instagram that he and his band were safe. “Tonight has been beyond horrifi c,” the singer wrote. “I still don’t know what to say … My Th oughts and prayers go out to everyone involved tonight. “It hurts my heart that this would happen to anyone who was just coming out to enjoy what should have been a fun night.” (AFP)