Are there cameras in the stairway?
Ag for Life said:Tom Doniphon said:
I can't figure out why a guy that's about to shoot 500 rounds would knock the window out with a hammer anyway.... why not just shoot it out? A window falling 32 stories will generally raise suspicions whether shot out or hammered.
My guess is he did both; shoot to start the hole, hammer to enlarge it if needed
Apparently there are no cameras anywhere but ground floor according to 2013 article.backintexas2013 said:
Are there cameras in the stairway?
Tom Doniphon said:
I can't figure out why a guy that's about to shoot 500 rounds would knock the window out with a hammer anyway.... why not just shoot it out? A window falling 32 stories will generally raise suspicions whether shot out or hammered.
I don't know unless he was trying to fit the screwed on bracket.backintexas2013 said:
So why did he prop the stair door open? What was the reasoning for that?
Yes, he was supposed to have the attached bedroom with the extra broken window.HoustonAg15 said:
The graphic of the room I saw had those other two rooms attached, not blocked off like the black line indicates here. Is this accurate?
North Dallas Forty oz. said:It sounds like Campos didn't knock. At 6:45 in the press conference video:Quote:
Questions: where exactly was the drilling and did Campos knock on the door when he heard the drilling? If so and he got fired upon by 200 rounds how did he get hit once?Quote:
Reporter: And he knocked because of the drilling?
Lombardo: No. I never--there's never been anything out in the public forum about knocking.
Exactly. I posted a link to a video a couple pages back taken by a guy that previously stayed in that suite. He walks us through the entire suite to include the view outside the windows. The left window has clear fire on both the tanks and the crowd. The right (NE) window would have gave him better fire down the strip, so maybe that was his intent, but never got that far.MW03 said:
One thing I still don't get is why the adjacent room? If his goal was to shoot the tanks from an East facing room, his suite had East facing windows that would have given him marginally the same angle on the tanks, especially if those were the first shots designed to ignite the tanks and he took his time lining up the shot. Deciding to approach that from an adjoining room seems like adding an unnecessary encumbrance if his plan was to get off as many rounds as possible. Not only would it take time to run between rooms, but it also created a second entry point he'd need to defend if he intended to barricade up. Unless he didn't care about a stand off and planned all along to off himself at the first site of cops, but then why the escape plan?
Don't want to disclose it? Paddock was working with the Feds and then went off the reservation?Premium said:
Doesn't every keystroke, every conversation, everything about everyone get stored in the gov. cloud? I find it impossible for the FBI to not find a motive.
ATX_AG_08 said:Multiple positions to shoot from? If he got pinned down in one location with overwhelming firepower he could move to the other and resume firing? It's so elementary and simple to understand.bmks270 said:
So... why did Paddock want 2 rooms...? He could have done it all from one room.
Why did he knock out two windows?
I know the guy is crazy, but I just can't imagine him doing things without some thought behind it...
i didn't realize that the stair well was right there next to the suite.MW03 said:
Not usually. Maybe at the bottom exit. But just opening the stairway will not usually trigger any alarm. It's the bottom door that exists outside the building that will alarm. They usually have signs on them "alarm will sound if opened".backintexas2013 said:
Are there cameras in the stairway?
Sounds about right. I guess we're done here.HoustonAg15 said:
Trying to wrap my head around the new timeline, it makes the story below sound stupid almost. Is anything false in this summary?
Paddock checked in on the 25th. On the night of the 28th, he set up cameras, which alerted him that a security guard was in the hallway. Unknown to Paddock, the security guard was checking on an unrelated door-ajar alarm. After seeing the guard in the hallway on his cameras, he shoots 200 times through the door and wounds said security guard.
In the six minutes after shooting the guard, Paddock hammers out two windows in two separate, but internally-attached rooms and turns his attention outside. In the 11 minutes after the windows were knocked out, Paddock shoots jet fuel tanks that don't explode and hundreds of people at the concert below.
Despite having thousands of unused rounds, many functioning guns, an escape plan, and no police presence in the hallway, Paddock shoots himself. The end.
MW03 said:ATX_AG_08 said:Multiple positions to shoot from? If he got pinned down in one location with overwhelming firepower he could move to the other and resume firing? It's so elementary and simple to understand.bmks270 said:
So... why did Paddock want 2 rooms...? He could have done it all from one room.
Why did he knock out two windows?
I know the guy is crazy, but I just can't imagine him doing things without some thought behind it...
This just raises more questions in my mind about the inconsistencies associated with this thing. He understands two shooting positions, but why put one in the adjoining room? He is prepared to change vantages in the event he's met with firepower in position one, but he stops shooting with a thousand rounds remaining fifteen minutes in despite not being confronted with a breach attempt? He tries to barricade the stairs and does barricade the suite, but leaves the adjacent room door unobstructed as though the stairs wouldn't be sealed in the event SWAT made it to the 32nd floor?
Maybe his exit strategy had to do with firing from the suite, then holing up in the adjacent room to make his egress as an "innocent hotel guest unlucky enough to be next to the shooter". But if so, did he book both rooms in his own name? And why fire from your safety suite when you could have just as easily fired from an East facing window within the same suite?
I suppose he could have planned to retreat into the adjacent room for a standoff in the event of a breach on the suite, but I still don't see any tactical advantage to keying authorities into the fact that he had the adjoining suite occupied. Certainly, SWAT had a floor map and counted the windows IMMEDIATELY and understood he had taken two rooms.
Just bizarre behavior for someone supposedly super smart. Then again, he thought shooting the tanks would ignite them despite being a pilot, so maybe he was just a dumbass after all.
Either way, the 2nd room is real hinky to me.
Alternatively:Quote:
Despite having thousands of unused rounds, many functioning guns, an escape plan, and no police presence in the hallway, Paddock shoots himself. The end.
No. obviously, what happened was that Chloe, back at Division, hacks into the city inspector's database, and retrieves the building schematics. She then uploads them to Jack Bauer's blackberry with a real time heatmap from the satellite feed she commandeered from the CIA.Quote:
Swat, with certainty picked up a floor map? In a matter of minutes this all went down. You think they ran by the lobby and snagged a floor map?
Yep. I think the physical toll all that bumpstock firing would have taken on an old tub of **** like this guy is an unmentioned and underappreciated aspect of this event.North Dallas Forty oz. said:Alternatively:Quote:
Despite having thousands of unused rounds, many functioning guns, an escape plan, and no police presence in the hallway, Paddock shoots himself. The end.Paddock shoots himself. The end.
- having a plan that went off the rails from the start because of the meddlesome security guard,
- having shot thousands of rounds over the preceding 11 minutes (something that would've be truly taxing for a 64 yo man who took very poor care of himself),
- with an increasingly dispersed crowd below making it more difficult to inflict casualties, and
- with police clearly in the hotel and closing quickly (in fact, arriving within the next 2 minutes),