Christine Caria and three other Nevada residents will fly to Washington, D.C., on Tuesday to speak with lawmakers about gun control.
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In an effort to help survivors reunite, the Las Vegas Review-Journal has launched the Route 91 Harvest festival Survivors Connection. The page offers a searchable database designed to serve as a conduit to facilitate contact between those looking for people they encountered during the shooting.
A group of about 150 survivors of the Oct. 1 Route 91 Harvest Festival shooting delivered a recurring message Tuesday: “What about us?”
Survivors of the Oct. 1 mass shooting are expected to share experiences and heal at a potluck dinner Saturday night in Henderson.
Las Vegas Strip shooting victim Tina Frost underwent another surgery and continues with her recovery from a head wound after being struck by a bullet fired into a crowd of concertgoers outside Mandalay Bay.
The protocol outlining eligibility for the more than $15 million raised for victims of the Las Vegas shooting is mostly finalized. The application process, however, is not.
The death toll from the Strip shooting has remained unchanged at 58 since Oct. 2, surprising even those who operated on the critically wounded.
The early results of a study by UNLV researchers raise questions about the current diagnosis model for post-traumatic stress syndrome, which says a person must have lived through a traumatic event or have a loved one who did.
Less than an hour before the first bullets hit the concert grounds, Heidi Benson reunited with a friend she hadn’t seen in six years.
In the back of blue 1994 Ford Ranger pickup truck, a man watched his wife die. In his devastation, he found two “angels” willing to do whatever they could to save her.
As dismissive and humble as he is, David Becker’s photos were some of the first pieces of evidence that pointed to the terror so many experienced Oct. 1. In the days after it happened, they ran on more than 130 front pages around the world.
Antonio McLandau wasn’t even on the job for a full two months when his public bus was transformed into an oversize ambulance the night of the Oct. 1 shooting.
The words “Vegas Strong” are possibly the most meaningful on the arm sling worn by Karessa Royce, a survivor of the Oct. 1 shooting on the Route 91 Harvest festival on the Strip.
Home is 1,400 miles away in Minot, North Dakota — a place Andrew Gudmudson has been away from for more than three weeks since he was injured in the Oct. 1 shooting on the Las Vegas Strip.
A survivor of the Las Vegas mass shooting is recuperating from a second surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, where she is being treated for a serious head wound.