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The surveillance footage is remarkable in its banality.
It shows Stephen Paddock, the Las Vegas gunman,
in the days before his mass shooting.
He cuts a lonesome figure
as he moves through the Mandalay Bay hotel —
playing video poker for hours in the casino;
buying snacks at a newsstand;
watching a LeBron James interview in a restaurant;
and at times, chatting with hotel staff.
But this picture of an ordinary gambler
disguises a far more sinister intent.
Through this previously unseen footage,
we’ll show how Paddock methodically planned his attack,
and how, over seven days, hotel staff unwittingly helped
him to move bag after bag of weapons to his room.
The videos, obtained exclusively by The New York Times
from MGM Resorts, begin on Monday, Sept. 25.
At the V.I.P. counter, he checks into a suite
on the 32nd floor, and books an adjoining room,
which he will check into four days later.
He doesn’t immediately bring in suitcases.
Instead, he spends two hours in the hotel,
going to his room
and eating at a sushi restaurant downstairs.
Just before 5 p.m.,
he drives his Chrysler Pacifica minivan
to the valet area, where a bellman loads
the luggage cart with five suitcases.
Paddock asks to stay with his luggage,
so the bellman brings him through the service elevators
to his room — something hotel management
says is not unusual.
Paddock spends the next four hours in his room,
and at 9:40 that night, he leaves the hotel,
bringing two suitcases with him.
He drives one hour to Mesquite, where he lived.
Cellphone records show that he stays the night
and spends most of Tuesday here.
Around 8 p.m., Paddock returns to Las Vegas,
but he stops at the Ogden,
a downtown condominium complex.
This is interesting for a few reasons.
Paddock was also renting rooms here for the entire week.
He checked in the previous Friday,
when a music event called the Life Is Beautiful festival
was being held in the surrounding streets.
Internet records recovered by the police show
that he searched for that festival’s lineup
and its expected attendance.
This was similar to his research of the Mandalay and the
Route 91 Harvest Festival, which he would later attack.
So, the Ogden and the Life is Beautiful festival
could have been used for planning, or may even have been a target.
Later Tuesday night, Paddock returns to the Mandalay
and a different bellman helps him to move
seven more suitcases to his suite.
Again, he uses the service elevator.
He tips the bellman, who had no way of knowing
these cases were packed with guns and ammunition.
He gambles for eight hours until morning.
Paddock was a regular at the Mandalay,
and several casino hosts knew him.
The videos show their interactions
as being completely normal and in no way alarming.
Remember, in two days,
Paddock has brought 12 cases upstairs.
He spends most of Wednesday in his room,
and that evening repeats a similar pattern.
He leaves the Mandalay, again carrying two suitcases.
He stops at the Ogden and drives home to Mesquite.
On Thursday, he buys a .308 bolt-action rifle
from a gun store and visits a nearby gun range
before driving back to the Mandalay.
That night, he again uses the valet service
and a bellman to carry a white container
and three suitcases to his room.
His arsenal of weapons is growing.
Again, he gambles through the night.
It’s now Friday, and at 8 p.m.,
the Route 91 Harvest Festival will open
in the fairgrounds across from the Mandalay.
Paddock stays in his room until around 3 p.m.
and uses his laptop while the suite is cleaned.
He checks into the adjoining room, 134,
using the name of his girlfriend, Marilou Danley.
He also tells cleaning staff
to leave behind the food-service cart.
Two days later, Paddock would use this,
and one other service cart, to create a surveillance ring
during his attack.
Overnight, he makes a brief trip to Mesquite.
Arriving back at the Mandalay at 6 a.m.
with two more suitcases.
Soon after noon on Saturday, he places
do not disturb signs on both room doors.
He declines housekeeping.
He takes an elevator to the valet area
and sits, waiting for his car.
He carries two more bags to his room.
He gambles some more,
and that night he makes a final trip to Mesquite,
returning to the Mandalay at 3 a.m. on Sunday morning.
He gambles through the night
in the high-limits slots area,
and returns to his room at 7:37 a.m.
It’s 12:16 p.m. when we see Paddock
going back to the parking garage.
The guests exiting the elevator have no idea
that in 10 hours, this unremarkable figure
would commit the worst mass shooting
in modern American history.
He returns from his car, bringing two suitcases
and a smaller bag inside.
Since Monday, he has brought at least 21 cases,
two smaller bags, a laptop bag and a container to his room.
This is the last time we see Paddock,
arriving at the 32nd floor.
Through the day, he opens, closes and locks
both rooms repeatedly.
At thirty-six minutes after 9, he locks the deadbolt
to room 135 for the last time.
Four minutes later, Jason Aldean,
who’s headlining the Route 91 festival,
begins his act.
Paddock then turns the deadbolt to room 134.
At 10:05, his shooting rampage begins.
In under 10 minutes, he would kill 58 people
and injure over 700, before taking his own life.
He had amassed 23 guns
and thousands of rounds of ammunition.
Almost six months since the attack,
Paddock’s motive remains unknown.