A woman described her six years of recovery after a bullet entered three lobes of her brain and doctors told her family she would not survive.
Las Vegas Shooting
Several events are scheduled for Sunday, which marks the sixth anniversary of the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting.
The Vegas Strong Resiliency Center is seeking donations to continue gifting handmade quilts to the survivors and relatives affected by the Oct. 1, 2017, mass shooting.
Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene stirred more controversy with a social media post claiming the Las Vegas mass shooting may have been part of a plot to get Republicans to give up their guns.
“Changing it to 60 may feel like an entire understanding that’s built up over the last 3 years must change as well,” according to a psychology professor.
The Public Education Foundation announced Tuesday a new college scholarship for the children of those killed in the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting three years ago.
A sculpture to honor Oct. 1 shooting victims apparently has stalled.
The new Storytelling Garden will offer a place to gather and share stories near the Healing Garden.
Eddie Schmitz and Sue Ann Cornwell work daily to preserve and develop the downtown memorial to Route 91 Harvest festival shooting victims.
Listen to the entirety of the Review-Journal’s five-part podcast series “Critical Condition: Accounts from One October,” available now.
An anonymous donor has given $62,500 to ensure that all of Stephen Paddock’s weapons are destroyed, according to the attorney for the special administrator of the gunman’s estate.
After nearly 16 months, the agency said it could not determine why gunman Stephen Paddock killed 58 people and injured hundreds of others in October 2017.
Within hours of a gunman opening fire Saturday at a Pennsylvania synagogue, Greg Zanis already had promised to deliver a tribute he has grown all too accustomed to making.
On Saturday, Centennial Hills Park in the northwest Las Vegas Valley held the largest Route 91 Harvest festival shooting reunion for survivors, first responders and families of the 58 people killed and hundreds more injured Oct. 1, 2017, on the Strip.
Catholic Charities of Southern Nevada and 100 volunteers served about 1,000 gourmet meals to vulnerable men, women and children on Friday.