On Oct. 1, 2017, hundreds of heroes sprung into action in Las Vegas after the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting. Many were police or EMS. Many were ordinary people.
The Strip
Your trusted Las Vegas Strip news source. Discover local updates, breaking news and headlines for the Las Vegas Strip here.
In four separate Las Vegas police videos from the night of the Oct.1 shooting, officers are instructed to turn their body cameras off.
The videos ranged in length from a few seconds to more than two hours and provided the most detailed look yet inside the concert venue during the Oct. 1 shooting.
The Oct. 1 shooting and its immediate aftermath were captured in harrowing detail by surveillance cameras on the roof of Mandalay Bay and the street corner closest to the Route 91 Harvest festival.
Las Vegas police on Wednesday released 911 calls from the night of the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting for the first time.
Documents released Wednesday by the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department contain details of 911 calls that came from the scene of the Route 91 Harvest country music festival on Oct. 1, 2017.
Las Vegas police on Wednesday released a fifth batch of Route 91 Harvest festival shooting records.
Las Vegas police on Wednesday released the largest batch of Oct. 1 shooting records yet.
A Las Vegas Review-Journal documentary explores the trauma that thousands of Route 91 Harvest festival survivors still sift through each day.
Las Vegas police released body camera footage on Wednesday that depicts the moment officers breached the Oct. 1 gunman’s Mandalay Bay suite.
The first police officer to breach the Las Vegas gunman’s Mandalay Bay suite Oct. 1 did not activate his body camera, the Las Vegas Review-Journal learned Tuesday.
MGM Resorts International has hired at least five former Metropolitan Police Department SWAT team members and several former military officers in recent months as it strengthens security at its properties following the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
Fifty-eight red roses, one for each person killed in the Oct. 1 shooting in Las Vegas, were raised toward the sky Sunday evening a vigil attended by about 300 people at the south end of the Strip to commemorate six months since their loved ones were killed and hundreds more injured.
MGM Resorts released surveillance footage on Thursday of the man behind the Oct. 1 shooting in the days and hours beforehe fired upon a concert crowd from his room inside Mandalay Bay.
Volunteers are helping the broad array of Oct. 1 memorial items take a permanent place in the Clark County Museum.