A Las Vegas probate attorney spent nearly 5½ years helping coordinate the distribution of money from the estate of the Oct. 1, 2017, mass shooter to the families of those he murdered.
Shootings
All property owned by Stephen Paddock, who killed dozens of Las Vegas concertgoers in 2017, has been sold and all of his guns were destroyed or taken out of circulation by the FBI.
A judge has ordered the destruction of the majority of the weapons used and owned by the gunman who murdered dozens in the 2017 Las Vegas mass shooting.
Slide Fire Solutions argues that the gunman’s estate — earmarked for the families of the 58 killed — should share in any potential damages against the bump stock manufacturer.
The Nevada Supreme Court should decide whether gun manufacturers can be found negligent in connection with the Las Vegas massacre, a federal judge has decided.
The trial of Douglas Haig, the Arizona man accused of illegally selling ammunition to the Route 91 Harvest festival gunman, has been postponed.
Fearing bias, the Arizona man who sold ammunition to the Route 91 Harvest festival gunman now wants to face a jury in Reno instead of Las Vegas.
A Las Vegas jury will decide the fate of the Arizona man who sold ammunition to the Route 91 Harvest festival gunman.
The Arizona man who sold ammunition to the Las Vegas shooter doesn’t want a jury trial. Because of bias concerns, he has asked to be tried by a judge.
The Arizona man who sold ammunition to the Las Vegas mass shooter wants his case thrown out of court.
Federal prosecutors insisted in a recent court filing that any future trial against Douglas Haig needs to mention Stephen Paddock, the man who fatally shot 58 people on the Strip.
MGM Resorts International and thousands of Las Vegas shooting victims have asked a federal judge to pause their litigation while they attempt to settle out of court.
Federal prosecutors are opposing the request by an Arizona man, who sold ammunition to the Las Vegas shooter, to move his case out of Nevada.
An Arizona man who sold bullets to the Oct. 1 gunman was excused from his Las Vegas arraignment Monday, and his lawyer entered a not-guilty plea on his behalf.
Families of victims and survivors of the mass shooting on the Las Vegas Strip appeared for a press conference Monday morning in California.