Diff: Stephen Paddock
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'''Stephen Craig Paddock''' (9 April 1953 - 1 October 2017) was the perpetrator of the 1 October 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas, Nevada. He fired from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino into the Route 91 Harvest music festival. The attack killed 58 people at the time and injured hundreds more. Paddock died by suicide in his hotel room before police entered. |
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Stephen Paddock (1953-2017) was an American mass murderer responsible for the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history. On October 1, 2017, Paddock opened fire from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay hotel in Las Vegas, killing 59 people and injuring hundreds more. This wiki page provides an overview of Stephen Paddock's background, the Las Vegas shooting, and the subsequent investigation. |
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The shooting remains one of the deadliest mass shootings in modern United States history. Investigators found that Paddock acted alone and did not identify a clear ideological, political, religious, or organisational motive. |
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== Background == |
== Background == |
Stephen Craig Paddock was born on April 9, 1953, in Clinton, Iowa, United States. Not much is known about his early life, but he had a successful career in real estate and reportedly held various investments. Paddock had no known criminal record or history of violent behavior, which added to the shock and mystery surrounding the Las Vegas shooting. |
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Paddock was born in Clinton, Iowa. The 1 October After-Action Report records that he received a business administration degree from California State University, Northridge in 1977. He later worked for the U.S. Postal Service, the Internal Revenue Service, and a company that became part of Lockheed Martin, before working in real estate. |
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== Las Vegas Shooting == |
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On the night of October 1, 2017, during the Route 91 Harvest music festival in Las Vegas, Paddock opened fire on the crowd from his hotel room. He had meticulously planned the attack, stockpiling an arsenal of firearms and ammunition in his hotel suite. The gunfire lasted for approximately 10 minutes, causing mass panic and confusion among the attendees. In the end, Paddock's actions claimed the lives of 59 people and left hundreds injured. |
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The same report states that Paddock had no criminal record before the shooting apart from a minor traffic citation, and that he had no known military experience. He lived in Mesquite, Nevada, north-east of Las Vegas, and was known as a private person who kept a low profile. |
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== Investigation and Motive == |
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The investigation into Stephen Paddock's motives for the Las Vegas shooting did not yield conclusive answers. There were no indications of a specific political or ideological motive, and no affiliations with extremist groups were discovered. Paddock's past and personal life offered little insight into why he carried out such a heinous act. |
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== Attack == |
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On 1 October 2017, the Route 91 Harvest Festival was being held at the Las Vegas Village concert venue, across from Mandalay Bay. More than 22,000 people were present. Paddock had checked into Mandalay Bay days before the attack and occupied a room on the 32nd floor overlooking the venue. |
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== Legacy and Impact == |
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The Las Vegas shooting left an indelible mark on the city and the wider nation, prompting discussions on various issues: |
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The after-action timeline records first shots at about 10:05 p.m. and last shots at about 10:15 p.m. Responding officers reached the 32nd floor soon after, and a strike team entered Paddock's room at about 11:20 p.m. The FBI's Las Vegas Review Panel reported that Paddock fired more than 1,000 rounds. |
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# Gun Control Debate: The incident reignited debates over gun control laws in the United States, particularly regarding the accessibility of high-capacity firearms. |
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# Security Measures: The shooting prompted a reassessment of security protocols for large-scale events, hotels, and public spaces to enhance public safety. |
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# Mental Health and Violence: The incident raised questions about mental health support and the association between mental illness and acts of mass violence. |
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# Community Resilience: The Las Vegas community rallied together in the aftermath of the shooting, providing support to survivors, families of the victims, and emergency responders. |
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Law enforcement found numerous firearms in the hotel room. Other firearms and materials were later found at his homes and in his vehicle. The attack produced a large emergency response involving police, fire, ambulance, hospitals, hotel security, federal agencies, and public authorities. |
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== Investigation == |
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The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department and the FBI investigated Paddock's preparation, weapons, finances, travel, internet activity, relationships, and possible motives. The FBI Behavioural Analysis Unit later convened the Las Vegas Review Panel to study possible motivating factors and pre-attack behaviour. |
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The FBI panel found no evidence that the attack was motivated by political, religious, social, or ideological beliefs. It also found no evidence that Paddock conspired with anyone. Investigators did not find a manifesto, suicide note, video, coded message, or other communication explaining the attack. |
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The panel concluded that there was no single clear motivating factor. It assessed that Paddock had declining physical and mental health, worsening functioning, and financial decline in the last years of his life. It also assessed that his plan combined suicide with a desire for infamy through a mass casualty attack. |
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== Planning == |
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Investigators found that Paddock prepared methodically. The FBI panel described extensive firearms and ammunition acquisition, online research, site selection, surveillance, and end-of-life planning. It also found no evidence that he told another person of his intention to attack. |
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The choice of the Mandalay Bay room gave him height, distance, privacy, and a view of a crowded outdoor venue. The FBI panel assessed that his final site selection was tactical rather than linked to a grievance against the hotel, casino, festival, or specific victims. |
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== Emergency Response == |
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The public-safety response was large and complex. The 1 October After-Action Report describes multiple police agencies, fire departments, private ambulance companies, hospitals, dispatch centres, and public bodies responding at the same time. |
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The report also identified communication and coordination problems, which is common in fast-moving mass casualty incidents. Its purpose was to record lessons for future preparedness, not to retell the attack for public spectacle. |
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== Later Interpretation == |
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The absence of a simple motive has shaped most discussion of Paddock. It is accurate to say that investigators identified planning, opportunity, isolation, decline, and a desire for infamy, but not a conventional ideological cause. |
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Coverage of Paddock should avoid turning the page into a memorial to the perpetrator. The central public interest is the attack, the victims, the investigation, the emergency response, and what official reviews found about preparation and motive. |
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== See Also == |
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* [[Mass_Shootings]] |
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* [[Police_officer]] |
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* [[Vigilante]] |
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== References == |
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* [https://www.fbi.gov/file-repository/u-lvrp-key-findings-bau-las-vegas.pdf/view FBI: Key Findings of the Behavioural Analysis Unit's Las Vegas Review Panel] |
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* [https://www.policinginstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/1OctoberAfterActionReport.pdf 1 October After-Action Report] |
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* [https://vault.fbi.gov/stephen-paddock/Stephen%20Paddock%20Part%2001/view FBI Vault: Stephen Paddock Part 01] |
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[[Category:Crime]] |
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[[Category:United States]] |
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[[Category:Mass Shootings]] |