A timeline of the Las Vegas shooting that killed 59 people

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The Guardian
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How the Las Vegas shooting unfolded

The Guardian |
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Paddock knocked out the windows in his hotel suite and fired downwards at the concert crowd.

10pm in Las Vegas

It is a warm night in America’s gambling capital and more than 22,000 country music fans of all ages, including children and teenagers, are in upbeat mood at the Las Vegas Village and Festival Grounds, run by MGM Resorts. It is the climax of the sold-out Route 91 Harvest festival , “three days of country music on the Vegas Strip”. The singer Jason Aldean is beginning his set, overlooked by the two gold towers of the Mandalay Bay hotel, which has 3,309 rooms and a 135,000 sq ft casino.

Just after 10pm

Rapid fire rings out. At first, not many people realise the seriousness of the situation, assuming the sounds are part of the show. But as bullets continue to rain down, the music stops and Aldean rushes off stage. “He literally dropped his guitar, threw it down and sprinted to the side,” a witness, Brian Claypool, told the MSNBC channel. “A lot of people were still sitting in their seats. They didn’t realise what was going on … There was an onslaught of shots. It felt like it was world war three, like it would never end.”

William Walker, from Ontario, California, said, “It sounded like something was wrong with the speakers. Jason Aldean kept playing through three rounds of it. Then once he stopped everyone took it more seriously.

Bullets hit concertgoers and spark off the pavement. People scream and duck for cover, fall on top of each other or run for their lives; witnesses see people fall dead in front of them. Split-second decisions make the difference between life and death. 

10.08pm

Police get the first call reporting the shooting. According to the New York Times, video captured nine seconds of rapid, continuous bursts of fire, followed by 37 seconds of silence and panicked screaming from the crowd. Gunfire then erupted again in at least two more bursts, both shorter than the first.

There is a stampede and chaos. Megan Kearney told NBC, “People started screaming that they were hit and to get down and then about every 20 seconds after that you would hear a round of machine guns and people just dropping; I mean hundreds of bodies all over the ground.”

Accused shooter Paddock had no known links to terror groups.
Photo: Washington Post

Desiree Price, from San Diego, said, “Two girls hid behind a car with us, right outside the concert. We huddled together. That’s why I have their blood on me. One girl was shot in her leg, the other had it in her shoulder. It didn’t stop so we all ran - we kept going.”

There are acts of heroism from concertgoers and first responders treating the wounded despite continued gunfire. More than a hundred people are taken to the University Medical Center in ambulances and cars. 

Taking cover under a table, Kevin Kropf, from Orange County, California, waited until tactical police units came in. “I didn’t want to get up because I didn’t want to get mistaken for a bad guy and get shot."

The streets between the concert grounds and the nearest medical center are a non-stop stream of ambulances and police. Reports of gunmen and shootings at other hotels circulate on Reddit and Twitter, adding to the chaos and panic. Survivors keep emerging from apartment buildings, motels, parking garages and other emergency shelters. They have nowhere to go, since the Strip remains on lockdown.

11.20pm

Seventy-two minutes after the first call to police, several Swat teams are sent to the 32nd floor of the the Mandalay Bay hotel and, using explosives, get inside the attacker’s room. Stephen Paddock, 64, of Mesquite, Nevada, is dead, apparently from a self-inflicted gunshot. Police say he has at least 10 rifles in the room and has been staying there since 28 September. His motive remains unknown.

At least 59 people have been killed - the deadliest mass shooting in American history - and more than 500 injured.

Most of the famous Vegas strip, including Caesars Palace, is locked down. Flashing red and blue lights from countless ambulances and police cars nearly outshine the casino towers on the strip. 

Pre-dawn

Police search Paddock’s house in Mesquite, a town on the Nevada-Arizona border.

Heavily armed police searched Paddock's home early Monday morning.
Photo: AP

4.11am
Donald Trump, facing his first major mass shooting, tweets, “My warmest condolences and sympathies to the victims and families of the terrible Las Vegas shooting. God bless you!”

7.50am

Trump makes a statement at the White House, describing the attack as “an act of pure evil” and announcing that he will visit Las Vegas on Wednesday. “In moments of tragedy and horror, America comes together as one,” says the president, who has proved a divisive figure on many issues.

8am

Paddock’s brother Eric, who lives in Orlando, says he is “completely dumbfounded” by the shooting. “We can’t understand what happened,” Eric says. “He’s not an avid gun guy at all. The fact that he had those kind of weapons is just - where the hell did he get automatic weapons? He has no military background or anything like that.” 

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