Massive Vegas Twist: Report Puts Cops Outside Shooter’s Door BEFORE Attack Started
The
latest change in the Las Vegas shooting timeline puts law enforcement
outside the shooter’s door minutes before the massacre began.
3
November, 2017
One
month after the Las Vegas shooting, there are a number of remaining
questions about what led up to the massacre and how it unfolded, but
there are also a several questions about why the timeline continues
to change drastically—and the latest change puts law enforcement
outside the shooter’s door minutes before the
massacre began.
Some
of the most glaring changes in the timeline have revolved around the
account of Mandalay Bay Hotel security guard Jesus
Campos,
who was reportedly injured by suspected shooter Stephen Paddock.
Campos went from being just another causality in the shooting to
Paddock’s first
victim,
who was shot only once in the leg, despite the fact that the shooter
fired 200 rounds down the hallway in his direction.
During
an interview on
Fox News with Tucker Carlson, an attorney for the victims revealed
that not only did police officers respond to Campos after he was
shot, they were right outside of Paddock’s door before he began
shooting out of his hotel room window.
“As
of yesterday it was that two—we knew about Campos—but there
were two other police officers from MGM that were on the floor prior
to the shooting,” Craig
Eiland said.
The
conversation came up while Carlson and Eiland were discussing the
mysterious circumstances surrounding both Campos’ story and how
tightly he has been controlled by MGM Grand.
“Maybe
they’re concerned of what he’s going to say. Maybe they’re
concerned he’s not going to stick with the MGM story,” Eiland
said. “But
eventually he will be examined under oath by attorneys in these cases
and so it’s going to be important to know the timeline from what he
says and from what the other two—now
we know that there were two other police officers on the floor with
him prior to the shooting—those
are all questions that have to be answered and they eventually will
be.”
Carlson
responded to the revelation by asking, “Just
to be clear—not Las Vegas Police Department, but MGM employees
acting as security?”
“No.
There was a report yesterday that there
were two off-duty officers on the floor that responded to Campos
prior to the shooting beginning,” Eiland
confirmed for the third time.
Eiland
also noted that MGM Grand claims to have a “corporate
watch center” that
trains its employees to report any suspicious activity. So if a guest
arrived at Mandalay Bay Hotel with 27 rifles and 5,000 rounds of
ammunition stored in 10 bags, why didn’t the employees who helped
him, or the cleaning service who visited his room regularly, report
suspicious activity? And if they did, why wasn’t it addressed?
“I do think that after 30 days, we ought to be having more information than we have right now. For example, we know bits and pieces. We know that he arrived with 10 bags. We know that two bellmen helped him carry those bags up. Then we find out that those 10 bags had guns in them and 5,000 rounds of ammunition. We know that MGM claims to have a ‘If you see something, say something’ policy—and you’re telling us that nobody saw those guns over a 5-day period? No maid, no housekeeping, no food service ever saw any of the guns? Nobody saw him using power drills in the hallway? Nobody saw him setting up security cameras? These are all things that need to be answered.”
As
The Free Thought Project has reported, while the FBI’s timeline of
the shooting continues to change, some of the most compelling
questions have remained unanswered since Day 1, such as, why has
no security
footage of
the shooter been released, despite the fact that he allegedly stayed
in one of the most popular hotels in Las Vegas for several days
before the shooting?
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