Masjid Ibrahim Islamic Center welcomed people of all faiths and backgrounds Monday night. Before their last prayer, they remembered victims of the Oct. 1 attack at the Route 91 Harvest festival that killed 58 people and injured nearly 500.
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Carrie Barnette, 34, of Riverside, California, was one of 58 people fatally wounded Oct. 1 when gunman Stephen Paddock opened fire on the country music festival on the Las Vegas Strip.
Some lights went out but Las Vegas stayed bright as properties on the Strip and around the valley turned their digital marquees off Sunday night in remembrance of the victims of last week’s massacre.
Members of Central Church in Henderson packed a Saturday evening service devoted to remembering shooting victims, praying for the injured, honoring first responders and working through grief.
Thousands of tourists and local residents, carrying flowers, signs and balloons, made their way Saturday afternoon to a memorial to remember the victims of the Oct. 1 massacre.
Vice President Mike Pence grieved with Las Vegas on Saturday, conveying a message of solidarity and solace to a city in mourning.
As sunlight faded on Police Memorial Park and a full moon rose over the valley, thousands raised candles for Las Vegas police officer Charleston Hartfield, who was killed in the mass shooting on the Strip.
Las Vegas city employee Cameron Robinson could tell if someone needed to smile, so he’d walk by and make a face to draw out a grin.
Officers from several agencies lined up their patrol vehicles Tuesday evening and escorted the body of Charleston Hartfield, the off-duty Las Vegas police officer killed in the mass shooting on the Strip, to Palm Downtown Mortuary and Cemetery.