It was Quinton Robbins’ desire to help others and his love of sports that led his parents to establish the nonprofit Playitforward.
Las Vegas Shooting
County commissioners voted unanimously Tuesday to approve a design for the Forever One Memorial, which will honor the dozens who died and hundreds who were injured at the Route 91 Harvest festival.
The Lahaina fire was not the first time Maui Police Chief John Pelletier has dealt with a massive loss of life. He was part of the department that, six years earlier, responded to the deadliest mass shooting in history.
Jimmy Nixon spent 16 years in prison for fraud, and he’s changed his account of when and how he met Stephen Paddock several times.
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.
The FBI released 600 pages of documents related to its Las Vegas mass shooting investigation, but the names of nearly everyone involved were redacted.
Handwritten letters sent to Paddock before the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting suggest that he had discussed his plans with an ex-convict.
One gambler told the FBI that Stephen Paddock, who opened fire on concertgoers on Oct. 1, 2017, killing 60, was “very upset at the way casinos were treating him.”
One of the finalists chosen to create the 1 October memorial is holding a community brainstorming session.
Public input and community feedback will be among the priorities as the committee picks a team to memorialize the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting.
Politicians, survivors and victims’ families gathered together to shed tears and share hugs on the fifth anniversary of the mass shooting, which killed 60 and injured hundreds.
Those interested in participating may submit creative ideas until Oct. 31. As of Friday, 72 people had submitted ideas.
As the fifth anniversary of the massacre approached, five longtime Metropolitan Police Department officers opened up about what they experienced that night.
Monique Grindler Tagliaferri survived the Las Vegas shooting five years ago, but the panic attacks that followed proved to be deadly for her.
A survivor of the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting is hoping to open a new chapter Saturday by getting married on the fifth anniversary of the worst day of her life.
Several events are scheduled for Oct. 1 to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the deadliest shooting in U.S. history.
The museum will display 22,000 items left behind at local spots in the days after the shooting, including letters, posters and white crosses.
The memorial will honor the 60 victims and hundreds of survivors who were part of the deadliest mass shooting in recent America history, which unfolded across the street from Mandalay Bay on Oct. 1, 2017.
Las Vegas police and the news organization agreed to end a dispute over the legal costs of gaining access to records from the Oct. 1, 2017, mass shooting.
The 1 October Memorial Committee voted unanimously Wednesday to approve the selection process for a permanent remembrance of the Route 91 shooting.
A man who lost his brother on Flight 93 said families should be at the heart of any memorial honoring those killed in the mass shooting on Oct 1, 2017.