Authorities are saying that the gunman had an "automatic machine gun" before relentlessly spraying bullets into a crowd, killing 50+ and injuring 400+. When police stormed the rooftop of a building the gunman was on, they discovered the man had took his own life. The body was identified as 64-year old Stephen Paddock. Reports are coming out saying that this may have been the deadliest ever shooting attack in modern US history.
As to what the reason was for his massacre is currently unknown. The Islamic State has claimed responsibility, however authorities have stated otherwise. The President has announced the attack to be an "act of pure evil".
Updates:
- Paddock has never had a criminal record, other than a traffic citation. - Correct
- Paddock lived a relatively happy life, he was wealthy and had a pilot's license, owned two airplanes. - Correct
- Paddock has no history of mental illness and wasn't facing any financial issues. - Correct
- A woman was yelling out to people "you're all going to die!" just less than an hour before the massacre.- Not verified, but potentially correct.
- Two windows were found broken in the casino hotel, Paddock likely didn't stay in one spot to shoot people. - Correct
- Paddock wasn't showing any previous suspicious activity enough for him to be under surveillance beforehand. - Correct
- Ammonium Nitrate, an explosive chemical ingredient for bombs was found in Paddock's car. - Correct
- Despite the US's gun laws, automatic guns are illegal, such heavy weaponry like Paddock's fully-automatic machine gun cannot be purchased legally.- Incorrect
- The reason why Paddock had went on a rampage is still unknown. - Correct
There were no "heavy weaponry", no "machine guns" used. So far no evidence has surfaced to indicate Paddock had either a Federal Firearms License, nor an ATF permit for ANY automatic weapons.
What was found were some modified SEMI-AUTOMATIC weapons - sporting rifles, with a "bump stock", which can be installed to simulate automatic fire, by using the weapon's recoil to actuate the trigger rapidly - but this is NOT a machine gun, as the trigger is still squeezed once per round fired.
Spreading misinformation does no one any favors.
Silencers:
I own 3 suppressors, two for rifles, one for a pistol.
Why? I provide a service to a number of horse stables in my area and to a number of dairy cattle farmers. I kill ground hogs. Ground hogs dig large holes and tunnels, and for many reasons are fond of digging and tunneling in and under horse stable lands and dairy pastures. This puts cattle and horses at risk of broken legs if they happen to step in a hole or a tunnel collapses under them. My use of a suppressor greatly diminishes the likelihood that the sound of gunfire will startle horses or cattle, and rarely alerts any other ground hogs that might be burrowing, sunning or feeding in the area.
On an average year, I kill between 300 to 350 ground hogs across the area I service.
My rates are extremely reasonable, and I am well regarding in my community for the service I provide.
Live traps are not terribly effective, poisons put horses and cattle at risk, and the use of poisons on dairy farms is actually prohibited by health regulations.
I'm a terrible shot with a long bow, but I'm I'm an ace with a rifle - as a former military sniper, the reason should be obvious.
So there are perfectly valid reasons for private citizens to own suppressors - I do not use the term "silencer" because the reality is nothing like what you see in the movies. They suppress, they do not "silence".
That leaves "assault rifle" - a term created by Adolph Hitler, and adored by both the ignorant media and politicians. There is absolutely no such thing as a "semi-automatic assault rifle", period. Anyone who tries to claim otherwise is a fool who does not know what they're talking about and has zero credibility. An "assault rifle" is always, 100% of the time, absolutely fully automatic. It IS a machine gun. Period, end of discussion. Anything else, no matter what any politician or reporter claims, is NOT an assault rifle. Calling even a highly modified AR-15 with a 38mm grenade launcher attached with an after-market 50 round magazine, a keyhole stock and a fixed bayonet is still not an "assault rifle". It is a highly modified semi-automatic sporting rifle.
Again, disinformation does not serve the common good.
It is possible for private citizens to legally purchase and own and operate fully automatic weapons. They are extremely rare, extremely expensive, and require an agonizing amount of federal paperwork.
I happen to own two - one an AK-47, taken out of the hands of a North Vietnamese soldier who awoke my uncle by jabbing him in the face with it. He killed that solider with his combat knife, took the rifler, defended the other soldiers in his company, and carried that rifle with him for the next two years, until he returned to the US in 1970. After he left the army, he kept that same rifle, filing all the required federal paperwork, and passed it along in the family when he died.
It hangs in a shadow box, along with a folded US flag, and my uncle's Medal of Valor. It hasn't been fired since it left Vietnam, but it does get cleaned and oiled twice a year.
The other is a Thompson M1928A1 which was originally seized by Thomas J. Friel, one of Eliot Ness's original team members, and has an extremely long history as to how it came into the possession of my family, who have owned it for several decades. Like my uncle's AK-47, this is a priceless piece of American history, and while it costs me several thousand dollars a year to keep and maintain these, I do so proudly. One as a patriot, the other as a law-abiding citizen. Although, I have once fired the Thompson - at an outdoor range, during a special event put on by the club. It was also fired by the Sheriff at said same event, who was a little misty-eyed hearing this history of this particular firearm.
So it should go without saying, I do very much support firearm ownership. It is one of our most important Constitutional Rights.
Events like this clearly indicate there are some real social problems - but these will not be resolved through any manner of firearms regulations. These are issues of mental health. While Paddock may not have been diagnosed with any mental issues, there was clearly something wrong with him that he would take such horrific action.
I'll leave you with this - I would be my recommendation, in light of this tragic event, and in the name of public safety, for hotels like this to replace the windows in their buildings with Class VII ballistic glass. As this type of glass is rated to stop multiple rounds of high-powered rifle fire, it would go a tremendous way to prevent any such future acts, as this sort of glass could not easily be broken, making it much harder for anyone to commit a similar act.
The rest of a real solution is dependent on changes to current mental health care and even more so, on both the availability of such services and proper insurance coverage for such services.