No clear motive found for 2017 Las Vegas
massacre: sheriff
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[August 04, 2018]
(Reuters) - Police have uncovered no
clear motive for the gunman who killed 58 people at outdoor concert in
Las Vegas last year, in the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S.
history, a sheriff said on Friday.
Stephen Paddock, 64, a retired real estate investor, poured gunfire from
a sniper's nest in his 32nd-floor Mandalay Bay hotel suite into a crowd
of more than 20,000 people attending a music festival in October 2017,
then killed himself before police stormed his room.
Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Sheriff Joe Lombardo said law
enforcement can answer questions as to where, when and how Paddock
operated, but had been unable to uncover his exact motive.
"What we have not been able to definitively answer is the why Steven
Paddock committed this act," he told a televised news conference in
releasing a final criminal investigative report.
Paddock, who had amassed an arsenal of high-powered weapons and
accessories, did not leave a suicide note or manifesto explaining his
actions, Lombardo said.
The sheriff has previously noted that a large loss of money by Paddock
just before the shooting could have been a factor.
At the news conference, Lombardo described Paddock as "an unremarkable
man" whose movements leading up to the massacre did not raise any major
suspicion.
Lombardo said the investigation concluded there was no second shooter
and no conspiracy behind the killing. He also delivered an emotional
message to the hundreds of people injured and the families of those
killed.
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The site of the Route 91 music festival mass shooting is seen
outside the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada,
U.S. October 2, 2017. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
"The heaviest burden will be carried by the families of those who
didn't come home and those who suffered life-changing injuries and
psychological trauma," he said.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Tom Brown)
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