Fifty-eight people killed. More than 500 injured. And yet, nearly a
month after the Las Vegas Strip experienced the worst mass shooting in
modern American history, local and federal authorities are refusing to
fill in the blanks.
It wasn’t always like this. In the days after Oct. 1, when Stephen
Paddock opened fire on the Route 91 Harvest festival crowd from his
Mandalay Bay corner suite, Las Vegas police were hosting multiple news
conferences a day. Then, once a day. Then, once every few days.
They compiled and released snippets of officers’ body camera footage.
They spent several minutes answering specific questions. They released a
comprehensive timeline, which ended up being wrong. They took it back,
and tried to
clarify the errors, but instead caused more confusion.
By Oct. 13 — the last time the Metropolitan Police Department or the
FBI addressed the media or public — something had changed. The sheriff,
who had been straightforward and stern, was now
emotional and at times combative. Both he and the FBI failed to provide much new information, and at the end of the meeting, they refused to take questions.
Since that day, the only person who has shed more light on the investigation is
Mandalay Bay security guard Jesus
Campos,
who was shot in the leg while approaching the gunman’s room. His
platform to share that information? “The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” which
aired last week. He hasn’t made himself available to the media since.
“It doesn’t matter,” FBI spokeswoman Sandra Breault told the Las
Vegas Review-Journal on Thursday, when asked why there had been no
significant updates in two weeks. “It’s an ongoing investigation, and
unless there’s something to report, there will not be a briefing.”
Calls to the national FBI office were forwarded back to Breault at the Las Vegas office.
At least twice this week, the Las Vegas Review-Journal has asked to
speak with Sheriff Joe Lombardo about the shooting investigation. Both
times, reporters were told by Carla Alston, the Police Department’s
director of communications, that the sheriff “will not be conducting
interviews.”
“As he has stated previously, the case is still ongoing” she said in
an email Thursday. “Another media briefing will be held when we have new
and accurate information.”
When asked when that briefing would be,
Alston guessed it could occur in the next two weeks. The Review-Journal
also specifically asked about the
more than 50,000 hours of overtime that Metro officers have logged since Oct. 1 on work directly related to the shooting investigation.
“Investigators have made progress on investigative leads and in
mapping out Stephen Paddock’s life for the last few years — and they’re
still not done,” Alston said. “We still have officers dedicated to this
case 24/7.”
She agreed that members of the public have a right to know more, “but
they have a right to accurate information and not the speculation …
that has filled so many news stories the past month.”
MANY UNKNOWNS
Nearly a month after the mass shooting, the gunman’s motive remains a mystery.
More straightforward questions also remain unanswered,
including whether the 32nd floor of Mandalay Bay — where the gunman was
staying — has surveillance cameras, and what exactly investigators
collected in the gunman’s hotel room and homes.
Authorities also have not said how long the gunman had a “do not
disturb” sign on his hotel door, and whether hotel staff saw something
suspicious in his room but failed to report it.
Though authorities have described the investigation as a team effort,
they have not explained what role Las Vegas police, the FBI and the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are playing in the
case.
https://www.reviewjournal.com/crime/shootings/authorities-put-brakes-on-information-flow-in-las-vegas-shooting/