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The Frightening Enigma of the Las Vegas Shooter
The Atlantic ^ | Oct. 3 2017 | David A. Graham

Posted on 10/03/2017 1:09:00 PM PDT by Heartlander

The Frightening Enigma of the Las Vegas Shooter

The absence of any known ideological or personal motivation behind Sunday night’s massacre makes the terror of an already random act of violence even deeper.

Even before the victims are counted and the blood dried after mass shootings, the public, press, and politicians all begin searching to understand what drove the perpetrators. This is important as a matter of law enforcement—Did they work alone? Is there a remaining threat?—and to make sense of the senseless. But it also serves an important psychological purpose: If the killer can be fit into a known profile, it provides some minimal comfort to an otherwise horrifyingly random crime, some feeling that the key to preventing the next tragedy is just doing a better job of recognizing people like him (it’s almost always a him) and stopping them.

It’s one thing to tell people, “If you see something, say something,” but if no one sees anything, it won’t help. That’s one reason that Stephen Craig Paddock, the man police have identified as the shooter in the Vegas massacre, which killed at least 59 people, is such a frightening enigma. His motivations are, as yet, entirely opaque. As countless people pointed out Monday, Paddock does not immediately fit the “profile” of a mass shooter. More accurately, he does not fit any of the obvious profiles.

Here’s what we do know about the man. He was 64 years old, and lived in Mesquite, Nevada, a town 80 miles northeast of Las Vegas. His brother Eric said he was well-to-do, a millionaire even, and he owned two single-engine planes. He lived in a clean, neat retirement community next to a golf course. Eric Paddock said his brother had moved to Nevada from Central Florida because he hated the humidity and because he loved to gamble; gaming was apparently his main occupation, though he had previously worked as an accountant or auditor and real-estate speculator. He had also lived in Texas, and according to The New York Times owned several other properties around the country. Police said his house in Mesquite was in good order.

“No one seems angry here. Everyone seems happy. Everyone waves,” a neighbor told The Nevada Independent. “Living in this kind of community, you don’t expect that. [It] is just unbelievable.”

Of course, reactions like this are a staple of post-atrocity coverage: With some rare and notable exceptions, few people expect that their next-door neighbors are mass-murderers in the making, and if they do believe that, they sometimes take action or move.

Yet in Paddock’s case, based on what little is known so far, the reaction seems more warranted. For example, Paddock was not a young man, as many mass shooters are, though as a white man he shares a race and gender with many other perpetrators. In the aftermath of the massacre, ISIS claimed credit, perplexing experts who noted that on the one hand, the group’s claims are generally borne out, but that on the other, Paddock was an unlikely ISIS recruit. The federal government says it has not turned up any evidence of ties between him and ISIS.

So far there is no indication that Paddock was part of any other extremist groups, whether on the far left or far right, nor that he belonged to ethnic or racial hate groups. Such affiliations sometimes lead people with superficially contented lives to do terrible things, but that won’t help explain this particular crime.

Sometimes those who commit crimes like this turn out to have been lifelong ne’erdowells, who outdid themselves with one final crime. While Paddock seems to have been solitary and itinerant, he was apparently financially successful, and he had no criminal record. This year, Paddock passed criminal background checks while buying guns, according to stores that sold the weapons to him. Other shooters are frustrated attention seekers who desire infamy, but nothing about Paddock’s background so far makes him fit that description either.

Or perhaps Paddock was mentally ill? It’s tempting to say that anyone who could have committed an act like the Vegas massacre must be unwell. “I can’t get into the mind of a psychopath,” Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo said when asked about motive.

“He’s a sick man, a demented man,” President Trump said Tuesday morning, though he did not offer any more detail. “A lot of problems, I guess. We are looking into him very, very seriously. But we’re dealing with a very, very sick individual.” House Speaker Paul Ryan accented the need for mental-health care Tuesday morning.

Yet there is so far no evidence to support the idea that Paddock was mentally ill, and his brother said he didn’t know of any. Besides, the idea of a link between gun violence and mental illness is, at the very least, probably exaggerated in the public imagination.

“Surprisingly little population-level evidence supports the notion that individuals diagnosed with mental illness are more likely than anyone else to commit gun crimes,” an American Journal of Public Health article found in 2015. “According to Appelbaum, less than 3 percent to 5 percent of U.S. crimes involve people with mental illness, and the percentages of crimes that involve guns are lower than the national average for persons not diagnosed with mental illness.”

Paddock’s gambling habit has raised questions about whether he might have snapped after a losing streak. He was known to gamble large amounts: Eric Paddock showed FBI agents a text in which his brother mentioned winning $250,000, and the Los Angeles Times cited law-enforcement sources who said Paddock had bought at least $10,000 in chips on occasion in the last year, an amount which requires legal disclosure. But the idea of a spontaneous snap occasioned by losses is hard to reconcile with the extensive preparation that the massacre required. Authorities found 23 guns in the Mandalay Bay hotel, from which he opened fire, and there were another 19 at his home, according to police. Some reports suggest he also had tripods equipped for guns. The Associated Press also reported he had devices that can be retrofitted to a semi-automatic gun to increase its effective rate of fire.

Much of the discourse about the massacre has focused on why law-enforcement officials have not labeled Paddock a terrorist. Federal officials use that word to refer to violence perpetrated for a political cause, and so far there’s no evidence to back up its use here. As I wrote after the 2015 attacks in San Bernardino, the FBI was notably deliberate in applying the term there, even after the press had declared the attacks an act of terror. James Holmes’s theater shooting in Aurora, Colorado, sowed terror, but calling it terrorism simply because it was a mass-shooting accident would make little sense.

There are elements of Paddock’s biography that, in hindsight, mark an atypical lifestyle, but hardly the type that ends in blood. He moved frequently. He did not have a typical job—but then again, there is no sign yet that he had problems with money. He was twice divorced—though plenty of people are, and Paddock seems to have had a stable relationship with a woman named Marilou Danley. According to the Los Angeles Times, she was vivacious, and the pair frequented a karaoke bar. (Danley, reportedly an Australian citizen born in the Philippines, was traveling abroad when the shooting occurred, and police are hoping to speak with her, though she is not suspected of involvement.) Paddock’s father was a convicted bank robber who was on the FBI’s most-wanted list after escaping from prison—but again, Paddock himself had no known criminal record.

Some of Paddock’s acquantainces and neighbors suggested he was something of a loner or a recluse. “He was weird. Kept to himself,” a former neighbor told The Washington Post. “We never saw anyone outside there,” another told the Independent. “I questioned whether anyone lived there. The blinds were always drawn.” Yet plenty of others disagree: “He was always normal.” “He was just a nice guy, and that was it.” “He was friendly all the time.”

Eric Paddock, who lives in Florida, has been a major source for information about his brother’s life, and a widely circulated interview that CBS News posted Monday seemed to tap into the strangeness of the situation. There’s no situation in which learning that your brother committed the worst mass-shooting in modern U.S. history won’t be disorienting. (He also says he didn’t know Stephen Paddock to be “an avid gun guy,” and while that’s a subjective determination, the size and type of the arsenal police found suggests more than a hobbyist’s interest.) Yet Eric Paddock’s reactions seem to capture a more essentially perplexing part of his brother’s crime:

“Not an avid gun guy at all...where the hell did he get automatic weapons? He has no military background,” gunman’s brother says pic.twitter.com/EMSKLQGYFM — CBS News (@CBSNews) October 2, 2017

“The fact that he had those kind of weapons is just—how the hell did he get automatic weapons? He has no military background or anything like that,” Paddock said.

Sputtering, shaking his head, and widening his eyes, Paddock tried to reconcile the person he knew with the killer: “He’s a guy who lived in a house in Mesquite and drove down and gambled in Las Vegas. He did … stuff. He ate burritos.”

The banality of that existence makes the Las Vegas massacre even more frightening than even the record-breaking death toll would suggest. The lack of any obvious motivation makes the terror of a random act of violence even deeper and more random. If an ordinary guy, with no obvious ties to extremists groups, no ideological motivations, an apparently placid personal life, stable finances, and no psychological abnormalities—the kind of guy who eats burritos, has a couple beers at the karaoke bar, waves to his neighbors, but largely keeps to himself—can emerge as the deadliest shooter in modern U.S. history, what hope can there be to identify suspects like him before they attack?


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Nevada
KEYWORDS: lvmassacre; mandalaymassacre; mariloudanley; paddock; paddockbio
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To: MeganC; Heartlander; tbw2; Alberta's Child
If a Southern white conservative drove up to New York and shot up a bunch of liberals at a Guggenheim Art Museum Event would the press ‘muse’ about the possibility he was a conservatives that hated liberals? You betcha they would.

Would the Atlantic state there was 'no obvious motive' at a Guggenheim Event Slaughter?

The witch from CBS - - who was not sad because the dead most likely voted for Trump - - was at least honest... hateful... but truthful. She's NOT the worst of white liberal elites - she's average in her hatred.

The folks at the Atlantic who wrote this drivel know that because they're surrounded by white liberal elites.

David A. Graham is a liar or a fool.

21 posted on 10/03/2017 1:27:15 PM PDT by GOPJ (Black men are 6% of the population - - they murder 42% of all cops killed in the line of duty.)
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To: MeganC; Heartlander; tbw2; Alberta's Child
If a Southern white conservative drove up to New York and shot up a bunch of liberals at a Guggenheim Art Museum Event would the press ‘muse’ about the possibility he was a conservatives that hated liberals? You betcha they would.

Would the Atlantic state there was 'no obvious motive' at a Guggenheim Event Slaughter? I don't think so...

The witch from CBS - - who was not sad because the dead most likely voted for Trump - - was at least honest... hateful... but truthful. She's NOT the worst of white liberal elites - she's average in her hatred.

The folks at the Atlantic who wrote this drivel know that because they're surrounded by white liberal elites.

David A. Graham is a liar or a fool.

22 posted on 10/03/2017 1:28:10 PM PDT by GOPJ (Black men are 6% of the population - - they murder 42% of all cops killed in the line of duty.)
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To: Heartlander

Everything has been leaking out of this investigation like a sieve... except the motive...


23 posted on 10/03/2017 1:28:31 PM PDT by caligatrux (Rage, rage against the dying of the light.)
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To: Alberta's Child

[ 1. This guy had a motive.

2. There was nothing random about the attack.

3. If we’re lucky, this won’t all be swept under the rug for political purposes (which is likely to happen if his motive involved Islam, homosexuality, or some aspect of leftist politics). ]

Logical Conclusion #1: If the shooter had a “Conservative motive” for the shooting we would already know about as the media would be all over the evidence of his “right wing motive”

Logical Conclusion #2: If the shooter had a “Left Wing/Socialist motive” for the shooting the media would be covering it up or just ignoring it in favor of the “We need Gun Control Narrative”

Logical Conclusion #3: If the shooter had a “Christian Motive” for the shooting see LC#1.

Logical Conclusion #4: If the shooter had a “Islamic Motive” for the shooting see LC#2.

Logical Conclusion #5: If the shooter had no conclusive motive at all, it will be implied he had a right wing motive or if he was slightly left they will just push the “Gun Control Narrative” all the more.


24 posted on 10/03/2017 1:29:25 PM PDT by GraceG ("It's better to have all the Right Enemies, than it is to have all the Wrong Friends.")
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To: Heartlander

“...though as a white man he shares a race and gender with many other perpetrators.”

Never hear them talk like this about blacks or muzz when discussing abhorrent behavior. Supposed to be racist or Islamophobic or some such nonsense.


25 posted on 10/03/2017 1:29:35 PM PDT by bk1000 (I stand with Trump.)
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To: tbw2

“One possibility is that he’s a liberal acting on the violent rhetoric of liberals saying all conservatives need to die, the evil fascists need to be fought, etc.”

At this point, no other specific possibility can be identified.


26 posted on 10/03/2017 1:30:20 PM PDT by reasonisfaith ("...because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved." (2 Thessalonians))
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To: Heartlander

I’m not necessarily buying any of the conspiracy theories floating around.. BUT

There is something that just isn’t adding up about the whole thing - and the massive void of any connection to anything that would normally be associated with such horrendous acts...


27 posted on 10/03/2017 1:31:12 PM PDT by TheBattman (Gun control works - just ask Chicago...)
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To: Heartlander

>>Paddock was not a young man, as many mass shooters are, though as a white man he shares a race and gender with many other perpetrators

I recall recurring incidents of lone shooters on the roofs of McDonald’s in the early 80s and one or more of the flipped out shooters were women.

It was about the time of the copycat tylenol killers.


28 posted on 10/03/2017 1:35:51 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Did Barack Obama denounce Communism and dictatorships when he visited Cuba as a puppet of the State?)
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To: Heartlander

There have been several highly suspicious enigmas since 2012, despite the fact that the federal Assault Weapons Ban was allowed to expire in 2004.

And each of the mysterious murderers’ families had incomes in the hundreds of thousands of dollars per year. According to the words and actions of many authorities, constituents in that demographic don’t commit crimes.


29 posted on 10/03/2017 1:36:19 PM PDT by familyop ("Welcome to Costco. I love you." --Costco greeter in the movie, "Idiocracy")
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To: Heartlander
"though as a white man he shares a race and gender with many other perpetrators"

He'd never say that about a black criminal, or he'd be fired.
30 posted on 10/03/2017 1:38:11 PM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: Alberta's Child

Maybe he just didn’t like country rap. Wasn’t the last band a band that sings a country rap song?
That song almost makes me feel like loading up.

Very odd... the festival was a three day festival... he stays through all of it and starts shooting at the last set?

They said he attended a concert earlier in Sept, wonder what that was, and why not shoot up that one?


31 posted on 10/03/2017 1:40:42 PM PDT by piasa
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To: ifinnegan

If he sent a love letter to MSNBC or Hustler or some other news agency as some of these killers have done, his manifesto is still under wraps or lost in transit.

Mist leave some sort or manifesto online, suicide note (which is sometimes supressed by authorities) or memo to a favored news agent.


32 posted on 10/03/2017 1:40:49 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Did Barack Obama denounce Communism and dictatorships when he visited Cuba as a puppet of the State?)
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To: blueunicorn6
"No steady job and lots of money."

He reportedly had been a successful real estate investor, and you don't need to have a steady job if you've already made your millions. I knew a guy like that - owned a dozen properties, spent about one day a week in his office, and died a millionaire.
33 posted on 10/03/2017 1:41:55 PM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: Heartlander
I still cannot get over Paddocks girlfriend Marilou was married to this guy for 25 years:


34 posted on 10/03/2017 1:46:15 PM PDT by Oldeconomybuyer (The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money.)
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To: ifinnegan
Most mass murderers, aside from Islamist terrorists, tend to be white.
35 posted on 10/03/2017 1:46:15 PM PDT by SoCal Pubbie
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To: tbw2

In other words, try to make this cold civil war 2 go hot.


36 posted on 10/03/2017 1:48:51 PM PDT by Biggirl ("One Lord, one faith, one baptism" - Ephesians 4:5)
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To: Alberta's Child

1. This guy had a motive.
2. There was nothing random about the attack.

3. If we’re lucky, this won’t all be swept under the rug for political purposes (which is likely to happen if his motive involved Islam, homosexuality, or some aspect of leftist politics).

..hated Trump, Christians, or was threatened to do so in killing them for Islam...Marilou Danley had a role, likely she was a mohammaden...$100,000 wired to terrorists...

FBI is lying to us.


37 posted on 10/03/2017 1:49:58 PM PDT by CincyRichieRich (The Left's family value: 'The U.S. is the great enemy of mankind!' (Che Guevara, 1961))
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To: KC_Lion

I'll speculate that he was likely pissed at his "live-in girlfriend" who's still traveling without him.

For all we know, she may have absconded with quite a sum of his money or she could be traveling with another man or woman! She doesn't look all that feminine to me.


38 posted on 10/03/2017 1:51:37 PM PDT by onyx (JOIN 300 CLUB BY DONATING $34 MONTHLY!)
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To: Alberta's Child

Which will only cause more folks to go online to get more info.


39 posted on 10/03/2017 1:55:00 PM PDT by Biggirl ("One Lord, one faith, one baptism" - Ephesians 4:5)
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To: onyx
As usual Onyx, I suspect your deduction will prove to be the most accurate.

He wired $100,00+ to someone in The Philippines.

But to who or what and why?

More questions whose answers are not forthcoming.

40 posted on 10/03/2017 1:55:34 PM PDT by KC_Lion (If you want on First Lady Melania's, Ivanka Trump's or Sarah Palin's Ping Lists, just let me know.)
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