Saturday, June 02, 2018

Vegas Shooting Police Files Show 3 Women Were in Stephen Paddock’s Room, Girlfriend had ISIS ‘Friends’


From Dangerous:
Recent documents released regarding the October 1, 2017 Las Vegas shooting are beginning to shed light on more discrepancies and abnormalities surrounding the official timeline and narrative of the tragedy as originally stated by Sheriff Joe Lombardo and Special Agent Aaron Rouse of the Las Vegas FBI. 
The documents also indicate three women were found in the alleged shooter’s room. The most recent batch of documents released include witness reports, dispatch logs, and officer reports that recount the events that took place that night and further reveal Paddock was potentially not alone in his room, as first stated by Sheriff Lombardo. 
Page 26 of the dispatch logs that were released by LVMPD details the moments when Paddock was located by a security detail at the Mandalay Bay. As actions were taken to assemble a team of officers to apprehend the suspect, a dispatcher shared the name of the alleged shooter located in Room 32-135, along with three females that were reported to be in the room with Paddock. 
However, the names of those three women are redacted from the report, while the check-out date listed for the women aligns with Paddock’s planned check-out date of October 2, 2017. 
On page 26 of the log, documented as having taken place at 11: 02 pm the night of the shooting when police breached Paddock’s room, “Units in control room 32 135. Suspect name of K(P)addock, Stephen. There three females in room.” The three women are then listed at #1, #2, and #3, with their check-in and check-out dates, but their names are redacted from the log. “Checked [in] on 9-25 scheduled to check out Oct 2nd.” 
Shocking details such a the one above are found throughout the nearly 2000 documents that were released following a court order after The Associated Press and additional media outlets sued the LVMPD for the release of this information, as there are many questions left unanswered due to communications shut down by Sheriff Joe Lombardo of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department. 
Information within the official LVMPD reports also stated that Danley was out of the country on a trip to the Philippines at the time of the shooting. Despite her fingerprints being present on ammunition, and her own personal admission of helping Paddock load ammunition into his guns, LVMPD maintains she is no longer a suspect in the shooting. 
Marilou Danley However, police documentation of the three females who were found in Paddock’s room, and whose identities have been redacted from the logs, leads to questions of additional persons of interest involved, including Marilou Danley. 
There are several witness accounts that state Danley was in town with Paddock, and had foreknowledge of Paddock’s talks about a potential shooting at an open air concert. 
One of the recently released witness statements includes a witness who recounts seeing Danley and Paddock at The Noodle Shop the Friday before the shooting. 
A hairdresser shared a wild story of Paddock rambling about an open-air concert and easy access for shooting. The hairdresser claims she shared her concerns with Ms. Danley and reported them both to the police, according to her statement. 
In an additional bombshell revelation, LVMPD dispatch logs show documentation of ISIS activity on the Facebook page of one of Danley’s ‘friends.’ Those dispatch logs show that the night of the Las Vegas shooting, LVMPD knew that Danley had followers on Facebook who showed ISIS “beheading videos” on their Facebook pages. 
While independent journalists were first to report that Danley deleted her Facebook page immediately following the Las Vegas shooting, it was later confirmed in January of 2018 when police search warrants were released. 
It is also worth noting that immediately following the Las Vegas shooting, ISIS claimed responsibility, claiming Paddock was an ISIS terrorist who converted to Islam six months prior to the attack. 
Even after the FBI said ISIS wasn’t involved, ISIS has continued to take responsibility for the massacre nearly four times, and has even published ISIS propaganda since the shooting in which they promise to attack Vegas again.