Natalie Grumet, who suffered a gunshot wound to her face during the Oct. 1 shooting, got a check Saturday from Down N Dirty Hat Co. owner Bart Godinez. He created a special cowboy hat as a fundraiser.
Las Vegas Shooting
Nineteen-year-old Rylie Golgart, who underwent surgery after a bullet fragment lodged in her spinal cord, returned to Las Vegas on Friday after spending nearly two months at a Denver spinal cord rehabilitation facility.
The Las Vegas Victims’ Fund now has more than $22 million in contributions and commitments, the committee chairman said Friday.
A judge on Thursday gave lawyers until the end of January to come up with a plan about how Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock’s assets could be managed.
At the classroom doorway, Jay Purves told the room of new recruits to his branch of event security firm Contemporary Services Corp. that the night of the Strip shooting proved why their job is necessary.
Search warrant records obtained Tuesday by the Las Vegas Review-Journal offer a peek into the massive investigation that ensued in the first few hours and days after the Oct. 1 massacre.
More than 1,700 people submitted comments to the Las Vegas Victims’ Fund, providing feedback on the plan to distribute raised money to victims and survivors of the Oct. 1 Las Vegas shooting.
Nevada Victims of Crime program has received 4,013 claims related to the Oct. 1 Las Vegas shooting as of Monday.
The Las Vegas Victims’ Fund campaign on GoFundMe created a new record on the site.
The family of a woman killed in the Route 91 Harvest festival massacre is asking for $45 million from the estate of gunman Stephen Paddock, and a Las Vegas judge could decide this week how his assets are managed.
A survivor of the Las Vegas Strip shooting who suffered a head wound chalked up a “huge” milestone in her recovery when she was able to walk out of a rehabilitation hospital in Maryland last week, according a social media update by the family.
Las Vegas Review-Journal reporters bring you the latest stories and updates on the Oct. 1 mass shooting.
Chad Robertson and his wife, Jennifer, raised $40,000 and drew a small army of volunteers to deliver the thank-you gifts to Oct. 1 first responders who helped them and so many others during and after the mass shooting in Las Vegas.
People affected by the Oct. 1 Las Vegas shooting now have until 10 a.m. Monday to offer feedback on the proposed guidelines for how funds should be distributed.
While analysts who cover MGM Resorts International are reluctant to talk about the company’s financial prospects two months after the 1 October massacre, they’re collectively saying MGM stock would be a good addition to a portfolio.