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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/2/2017 4:33:32 PM
Las Vegas shooting rampage kills at least 58, more than 500 people injured



At least 50 people are dead and hundreds are wounded after a gunman opened fire at a country music festival in Las Vegas on Oct. 1(Elyse Samuels, Monica Akhtar/The Washington Post)

LAS VEGAS — A gunman in a high-rise hotel overlooking the Las Vegas Strip opened fire on a country music festival late Sunday, killing at least 58 people and injuring hundreds of others in the deadliest mass shooting in modern American history.

The gunman, identified by police as Stephen Paddock, was later found dead by officers on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino, Sheriff Joseph Lombardo said during a news briefing Monday.

The shooting marked the nation’s latest outbreak of gunfire and bloodshed to erupt in a public place, again transforming a seemingly routine night into one of terror. The carnage in Las Vegas surpassed the death toll of 49 people slain in June 2016 when a gunman in Orlando, who later said he was inspired by the Islamic State, opened fire inside a crowded nightclub.

Lombardo said the death toll had risen to at least 58 by Monday morning, a number that could rise, as police are still investigating the scene. Lombardo also said another 515 people were injured after the shooting rampage. He did not specify how many of the people were wounded by gunfire or injured in the chaos that followed.

Paddock, 64, was found dead in his hotel room by Las Vegas SWAT officers who responded to calls about the shooting, police said. They believe he took his own life.

Under the neon glow and glitz of the Vegas Strip, thousands of concertgoers who had gathered for a three-day music festival dove for cover or raced toward shelter when the gunfire began at about 10 p.m. Sunday. Police said more than 22,000 people were at the concert when Paddock, who had checked into the Mandalay Bay on Thursday, began firing round after round.

Police believe the 64-year-old Paddock, a local resident, was a “lone wolf” attacker. Lombardo did not give further details, however, on Paddock’s background or possible motivation. “We have no idea what his belief system was,” Lombardo said during a briefing. “Right now, we believe he was the sole aggressor, and the scene is static.”

Recordings of the attack suggested that Paddock used an automatic weapon. He was found with more than 10 rifles, Lombardo said.

Relatives of Paddock’s said they were stunned by what happened.

“I used to fix things for a living. My job was to find the answers, and this is like, ‘what?’ This asteroid fell out of the sky. There’s no, there’s just nothing,” Eric Paddock, the gunman’s brother, said in an interview posted online by ABC-affiliate WFTV in Orlando.

Eric Paddock said that early in the morning, his “phones lit up from Las Vegas PD.” He said the family had been on the phone with detectives all morning “to try to understand this, trying to make sense of this.”

“As far as we know, we’re just another piece of input, but he has no affiliation with anything, as far as we know,” Eric Paddock said.

As Las Vegas police investigated the horror that had unfolded on the Strip, they also faced a tragedy within their own ranks. The dead included an off-duty city police officer, the department said Monday morning. Two other officers who were on duty were injured, police said; one was in stable condition after surgery, and the other sustained minor injuries.

“It’s a devastating time,” Lombardo said at the news briefing.

In the initial chaotic aftermath of the shooting, authorities had searched for a woman namedMarilou Danley, described only as Paddock’s “traveling companion.” Lombardo said that investigators spoke with Danley, who was found outside the country, and do not believe she was involved in the shooting.

Danley’s relationship with Stephen Paddock was not immediately known, but they lived at the same address in Mesquite, Nev., according to public records. Lombardo said police in Mesquite were entering Paddock’s home to conduct a search Monday.

Police in Las Vegas had only minimal interactions with Paddock before the shooting, Lombardo said.

“We have no investigative information or background associated with this individual that is derogatory,” the sheriff said. “The only thing we can tell is he received a citation several years ago; that citation was handled as a matter of normal practice in the court system.”

Few details about Paddock’s background were immediately known Monday. He was retired and lived in Mesquite, Tex., for several years before moving to the Nevada town with the same name. Relatives said Paddock was a quiet man. They said he was licensed pilot who owned two planes and often went to Las Vegas to gamble and see concerts. A spokesman for defense giant Lockheed Martin said in a statement that Paddock worked for the company for three years in the 1980s.

“Stephen Paddock worked for a predecessor company of Lockheed Martin from 1985 until 1988,” the statement said. “We’re cooperating with authorities to answer questions they may have about Mr. Paddock and his time with the company.”

President Trump praised the “miraculous” speed with which local law enforcement responded to the shooting, which he decried as an unfathomable attack on innocents gathered for a concert.

“It was an act of pure evil,” Trump said during remarks from the White House. “We cannot fathom their pain, we cannot imagine their loss.”

Trump ordered flags flown at half-staff and said he would visit Las Vegas on Wednesday.

Federal authorities responded to the shooting scene, assisting local law enforcement officials with the investigation. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said it dispatched agents to the scene, while FBI criminal investigators — rather than those in the bureau’s National Security Branch — are aiding local police in the case, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack on Monday, releasing messages through its Amaq news agency stating that the shooter was one of its “soldiers” and had recently converted to Islam, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, which tracks extremist groups.

The group, also known as ISIS, often claims responsibility after attacks, even in cases where it is unclear whether they motivated them or were involved. Law enforcement officials on Monday disputed the claims from ISIS.

“We have determined, to this point, no connection with an international terrorist group,” Aaron Rouse, the special agent in charge of the FBI in Las Vegas, said at a news briefing.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions said he met with FBI Director Chris Wray on Monday morning and spoke with Lombardo, to whom he “expressed my gratitude for the courageous work of his officers through the night and offered him the full support of the FBI, the ATF, and the entire Department of Justice as he takes the lead investigating this incident.”

“The investigation into the horrific shooting last night in Las Vegas is ongoing,” Sessions said. “To the many families whose lives have been changed forever by this heinous act, we offer you our prayers and our promise that we will do everything in our power to get justice for your loved ones.”

Federal homeland security officials said there were no specific, credible threats to other public venues around the country.

The shooting occurred at the end of the Route 91 Harvest festival, a three-day country music concert held over the weekend. The concert grounds are adjacent to Mandalay Bay, a sprawling casino on the southern end of the Strip.

The shots began as Jason Aldean, one of the final performers, was playing. Aldean posted an Instagram message that he and his crew were safe. The scene, he wrote, was “beyond horrific.”

Videos posted from people who said they were at the scene showed people screaming and running for cover amid the sound of gunshots that seemed unending.

“We thought it was fireworks at first or trouble with the speakers,” said Kayla Ritchie, 21, of Simi Valley, Calif. “They had been having technical difficulty all weekend. Then everything went dark.”

Ritchie traveled with Megan Greene, 19, for the concert, and the two were separated when people began fleeing. They found each other hours later.

“Everyone started running for the exit,” said Greene, who hid behind a truck before fleeing into the MGM Grand. “We were in the street and they told us to get down, get down.”

Taylor Benge, 21 was at the concert Sunday night and said he heard a round of pops that lasted for 10 seconds, as if someone was holding down the trigger. When a performer ran off the stage and the lights came on, Benge said, he realized that “about five feet to the left of me there was a man with a bullet wound to his chin.”

“He was just lifeless on the ground,” he continued.

Benge said he and his sister threw themselves on the ground as the gunfire continued and then ran for the exit. “My jeans are covered in someone’s blood, my T-shirt is covered in someone’s blood, my sister’s whole leg was covered in blood,” Benge said.

At least some people were injured in the frenzied effort to flee the gunfire. Tracy, 55, a California woman who declined to give her last name, said she was “trampled” trying to flee.

“We thought it was fireworks,” she said, a dazed look on her face and a bandage on her injured knee and shin. “I looked up at the Mandalay Bay. I could see the green light every time the gun fired. We ran for our lives. We went into Hooters and hid in the bathroom,” she continued. “We felt like sitting ducks there. We went to the second floor conference room and stayed there.”

A friend came with a mini bus, so Tracy and another friend ran out to the vehicle, terrified to go out on the street again. “Who thinks people would do something like this in America?” Tracy said.


A gunman killed at least 50 people and injured at least 200 during a country music festival in Las Vegas on Sunday, Oct. 1. The shooter began firing during Jason Aldean's performance, prompting the crowd to panic and the singer to sprint off stage. (Hannah Dorfman)

Vanessa and Philip Dyer came from Lowestoft, England, and got married Sunday in Las Vegas. They were out celebrating after the wedding, waking the Strip, when they first heard gunfire.

“I turned to Philip and said, that sounds like machine gun fire,” Vanessa Dyer said. “Then it went again.”

Philip Dyer added: “We’ll never forget the night we got married, but for all the wrong reasons.”

Corianne Langdon, 58, a cabdriver in Las Vegas for the last 6½ years, said she was about seven cars back in the taxi line at Mandalay Bay when the gunfire began.

She began driving away and saw police officers crouched down in the streets facing the hotel. Then, as she turned a corner at Las Vegas Boulevard, saw what she believed were hundreds of people running away from the concert – some jumping the fence on the side of the venue. A young couple jumped in her cab, and then another three or four people begged to get in, as well.

“I had people hanging out of my windows,” Langdon said. “They were screaming, they were so upset, and it just wasn’t getting to me yet the severity of what was going on.”

Police updated the public on the investigation into the deadly Oct. 1 mass shooting in Las Vegas that killed at least 50 people and injured 400 more. (Reuters)

Those injured in the shooting also included an off-duty officer with the Bakersfield Police Department in Southern California, who was taken to a hospital for nonlife-threatening injuries, according to a news statement. Several of the department’s officers were off-duty and attending the concert when the gunfire erupted.

Multiple flights bound for the McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas were diverted after the attack, the airport tweeted. All other planes were temporarily grounded, with a few flights resuming Monday morning.

The shooting comes as security measures at many music venues have been boosted in recent years after concerts were targeted in terrorist attacks. In May in northern England, a bomb exploded at a concert by American singer Ariana Grande in Manchester, killing 22 people; in November 2015, Islamist attackers opened fire at a rock concert in Paris as part of coordinated attacks that left 130 dead. In both of those cases, the Islamic State claimed credit for the attacks.

In Manila in June, a 42-year-old Filipino gunman armed with a rifle and a bottle of gasoline burst into a casino and set a fire, causing the deaths of 37 people. Police said the attack was motivated by gambling debts and other personal problems facing the gunman, who killed himself with a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The Islamic State also claimed responsibility for the attack, but officials repeatedly denied it was terrorism-related.

Berman reported from Washington. Travis M. Andrews, Brian Murphy, Wesley Lowery, Devlin Barrett, Matt Zapotosky and Julie Tate contributed to this report, which will be updated throughout the day.

(The Washington Post)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/2/2017 5:18:31 PM
Attention

Mentally disabled man dead after being taken down and punched in the head by Texas police

© Rex Curry / Reuters
The Texas Rangers have launched an investigation into a local police department after a mentally disabled man, who also lived with chronic pain, died shortly after an altercation with officers.

Police in the city of Temple responded to a call about a disturbance at a downtown apartment building at approximately 7:30pm local time Thursday.

The man whom they encountered, and believed to be the cause of the disturbance, appeared intoxicated. When police attempted to arrest him, he resisted and began shouting again.

As the struggle continued, the man, later identified as Stephen Gayle, began showing signs of distress and an ambulance was called to the scene. He was taken to Baylor Scott and White Hospital but died shortly thereafter, at approximately 9:07pm.

"They handcuffed him, and then as they were taking him back to the car, he did that little yell again, and it was at that point that they decided that they would take him down," local pastor Wanda Nichols told the The Temple Daily Telegram.

"They actually got him down on his stomach, and one officer kept his knee in his back and the other one was down at the front, kneeling in front of him... and then he kind of straddled him and he started punching him in his face."

Officers took Gayle out of the car soon after and he did not appear conscious so they attempted to resuscitate him on the scene before emergency medical responders arrived.

An autopsy has been ordered to determine the cause of death and the Texas Rangers are investigating the officers' conduct with assistance from the Temple Police Department's Violent Crime Squad.
(sott.net)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/3/2017 1:24:43 AM
Pistol

Knife attacker kills 2, shouts 'Allahu Akbar' - shot dead by French soldiers

© AFP
The Saint-Charles train station in Marseille
Two people have been killed during a knife attack at a Marseille train station, according to police. The assailant, who was reportedly shouting 'Allahu Akbar,' was shot dead by an army patrol at the scene.

The incident took place at the Saint-Charles train station in Marseille on Sunday.

The French Interior Minister Gérard Collomb said on Twitter that he immediately went to the scene of the attack.

The attacker was allegedly shouting "Allahu Akbar" during the incident, French media report citing police sources.

The incident is being treated as a "terrorist act," Reuters reports, citing a police source.

At least one person was killed by the assailant, who was subsequently shot dead by police.

The second person, stabbed during the incident has died, according to the police chief Olivier de Mazières.
(sott.net)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/3/2017 11:08:48 AM

WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE LAS VEGAS SHOOTING MASSACRE AT THE ROUTE 91 FESTIVAL

BY

Updated | Late on Sunday night, country music star Jason Aldean took to the stage to perform at the outdoor three-day Route 91 Harvest Festival. The sounds of country were quickly silenced, over-powered by the pops and cracks of bullets fired from an automatic rifle.

The shooting left at least 58 people dead—including two off-duty police officers—more than 500 injured, and brutally shattered what should have been a normal night for country fans who had traveled from across North America to see their favorite acts.

The ensuing nightmare for concertgoers saw them flee as gunshots continued to be fired without reply into the large crowd that eyewitnesses said could have numbered around 50,000 people. Some people were trampled in the stampede that followed the attack. The death toll could rise further, police warned.

Police said that one gunman, identified as Stephen Paddock, was "engaged" by police and killed. Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo, speaking at a press conference, said that the suspect was cornered on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino across the street from the festival, where he shot at civilians from his hotel room window. Police found more than ten guns in the room and he killed himself before they entered his hotel room, they said.

"We believe the individual killed himself prior to our entry," Las Vegas Sheriff Joseph Lombardo told a news conference.

The assault revived memories of the Islamic State militant group (ISIS) shooting attack at Paris' Bataclan concert hall that left 89 people dead, as part of a wider plot of attacks, in November 2015.

Police said that Paddock was a local resident, from Mesquite, Nevada, some 80 miles northeast of Las Vegas. They believe it was a "lone wolf" attack but are trying to find the suspect's Asian female roommate, who they have named as Marilou Danley and described as an "associate" who stands at 4 foot 11 inches tall and weighs around 111 pounds.

Police also said they are searching for a 2017 Hyundai Tuscon, with the number plate NV 114B40.

"We have no idea what his belief system was," Lombardo said. "Right now, we believe he was the sole aggressor and the scene is static."

Initial reports suggested that there may have been multiple gunmen on the strip, and an eyewitness tells Newsweek that gunshots were coming from "everywhere."

But police say that theory has proven to be false, and believe there was only one gunman.

Metro Police officers pass by the front of the Tropicana hotel-casino after a mass shooting at a music festival on the Las Vegas Strip in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. October 1, 2017.REUTERS/LAS VEGAS SUN/STEVE MARCUS

Lombardo said police do not believe that the shooter had any links to a militant group. But ISIS claimed the attack on Monday morning, calling Paddock a "soldier of the Islamic State" via its self-styled news agency Amaq on the encrypted messaging app Telegram. It posted a second message that said Paddock had converted to Islam "months ago."

"Attacker of the #Las_Vegas shooting is a soldier of the Islamic State and carried out the operation in response to targeting coalition countries," Jihadoscope, a cyber monitoring company that monitors jihadist activity, confirmed in a translation sent to Newsweek.

However, a U.S. official, unauthorized to speak publicly and speaking on condition of anonymity, told Newsweek, "There is no indication that there is any link whatsoever. They claim a lot of things."

The Islamic State militant group (ISIS) has used Las Vegas in two propaganda releases since its rise to prominence in mid-2014, one in an August 2014 guide that suggested the city as a target, and the other in May, a video that showed the city's famous strip alongside footage of New York and Washington, D.C.

ISIS supporters have carried out shooting attacks in San Bernardino, California, and Orlando, Florida, but the motive for this shooting remains unknown, and police are yet to confirm their findings.

For those visiting Las Vegas, some flights have started to resume at McCarran International Airport after being grounded in the immediate aftermath of the shooting.

Aldean, who was performing alongside other top country acts such as Eric Church and Sam Hunt, took to photo-sharing app Instagram after the attack, posting that he and his bandmates were safe. He called the shooting "beyond horrific."

President Donald Trump, in a speech delivered from the White House, condemned the attack.

"Our unity cannot be shattered by evil, our bonds cannot be broken by violence," the president said.

"We call upon the bonds that unite us: our faith, our family, and our shared values. We call upon the bonds of citizenship, the ties of community, and the comfort of our common humanity."


(Newsweek)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/3/2017 11:27:04 AM

Deadliest US shooting: 59 killed, and 527 injured at Las Vegas music fest Live updates


At least 59 people were killed, and 527 were injured in a mass shooting during an open-air music festival in Las Vegas, near the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino on Sunday night.

  • 06:32 GMT

    The British Royal family has sent its condolences to US President Donald Trump and the victims of the deadly attack.

    “Prince Philip and I [Queen Elizabeth II] were saddened to learn of the terrible attack in Las Vegas. Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families and those who have been injured,” Buckingham Palace's statement says.

  • 03:26 GMT

    Religious leaders, mourners and elected officials gathered at multiple prayer vigils around Las Vegas Monday night,AP reported.

    Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman spoke at the vigil outside City Hall. Several miles away, mourners and casino workers converged at a cathedral off Las Vegas Strip to honor the victims as well as the first responders to Sunday night’s shooting.

  • 03:02 GMT

    Police officers found 23 firearms in the Mandalay Bay hotel room Paddock occupied, Assistant Clark County Sheriff Todd Fasulo said.

    Also, investigators now say that 19 firearms have been found at the man’s Mesquite, Nevada home.

    Among the guns found in Paddock's room at the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino, were high-powered rifles, considered to be capable of penetrating police armor, ABC News reported.

    A modified bump stock rifle was also found. The bump stock allows a gun to simulate automatic gunfire.

    Law enforcement is still in the process of examining the guns to determine if they were able to fire automatically. Authorities also searched a separate location and found an explosive used in target practice, called tannerite, according to unnamed sources.

  • 02:49 GMT

    The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department issued a second press release Monday in which they're asking those who have pictures and videos to come forward and contact the FBI, adding that they’re still investigating the shooter’s motives.

  • 01:35 GMT

    New Frontier Armory in North Las Vegas, and Guns and Guitars, in Mesquite, Nevada – have confirmed they sold firearms to suspected Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock during the last year, ABC News reported.

    The shops stated that he passed all of the required background checks. Sixteen guns were also found in Paddock's hotel room Monday. It's not yet been determined if the guns Paddock bought at the shops were used in the massacre.

  • 00:18 GMT

    Police are gathered outside the suspected shooter's home in an upscale neighborhood in Reno, Nevada, APreported at 4:50pm PT.

    A dozen officers armed with rifles closed off a two block stretch around the house.

    Three SWAT team trucks and a bomb squad unit are also on the scene.

  • 02 October 2017

    23:27 GMT

    Police found ammonium nitrate, a bomb making ingredient, in suspected Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock's car, Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo told reporters Monday.

    Ammonium nitrate is a high-nitrogen fertilizer and often used to make homemade bombs, such as those used in Oklahoma in 1995.

  • 22:46 GMT

    An emergency has been declared in Clark County, Nevada, following the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history.

  • 22:42 GMT

    At least 59 people have died and 527 injured in the shooting, Clark County, Nevada Sheriff Joseph Lombardo said at a news conference Monday.

    He added there were 18 firearms, some explosives, and several thousand rounds of ammunition found in Paddock’s home.

  • 21:53 GMT

    Eric Paddock, the brother of suspected shooter, Stephen Paddock, seemed baffled about the situation while talking to reporters at his Orlando, Florida home Monday.

    “He was a wealthy guy and he liked to play video poker and he liked to go on cruises,” he said, Reuters reported.

    Paddock described his brother as a peaceful man.

    “He’s never drawn his gun, it makes no sense,” he said.

    He also said his brother moved back to the red desert hills of Nevada, in part, because gambling is legal in the state.


(RT)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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