Las Vegas shooting: death toll rises to 50
At least 50 people died and more than 400 more hurt when a 64-year-old gunman with an arsenal of at least 10 rifles fired on a Las Vegas country music festival on Sunday, raining down bullets from a 32nd-floor window for minutes before killing himself.
The death toll, which police emphasized was preliminary, would make the massacre the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history, eclipsing last year’s massacre of 49 people at an Orlando night club, Reuters reported.
Some 22,000 people were in the crowd when a man police identified as Stephen Paddock opened fire, sparking a panic in which some people trampled on others, as law enforcement officers scrambled to locate the gunman.
Shocked concert goers, some with blood on their clothes, wandered the streets afterwards.
Police said they had no information about Paddock’s motive, and that he had no criminal record and was not believed to be connected to any militant group. Paddock killed himself before police entered the hotel room he was firing from, Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo told reporters.
“We have no idea what his belief system was,” Lombardo said.
“We believe the individual killed himself prior to our entry,” Lombardo told a news conference.
Earlier reports indicated Paddock had been shot by police.
Lombardo said there were more than 10 rifles in the room where Paddock killed himself after checking into the hotel on Thursday. Paddock was not known to law enforcement, Lombardo said.
The dead included one off-duty police officer, Lombardo said. Two on-duty officers were injured, including one who was in stable condition after surgery and one who sustained minor injuries, Lombardo said. Police warned the death toll may rise.
To remind, presidents of different states, including Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, have offered condolences to President Donald Trump over the deadly incident.