Mike Dempsey never thought he would be a part of a second national tragedy.
Las Vegas Shooting
Las Vegas Review-Journal reporters bring you the latest updates on the Oct. 1 mass shooting investigation.
The slaying of five dozen people in Las Vegas did little to change Americans’ opinions about gun laws.
As of Friday, 10 people still were hospitalized in the Las Vegas Valley, four of whom were in critical condition, local hospitals reported.
A Georgia man threatened to blow up a Las Vegas Strip music venue “like the guy that blew up” the Route 91 Harvest Festival, court documents show.
MGM Resorts International will continue to use a modified advertising campaign with a #VegasStrong hashtag despite social media criticism that it is exploiting the Oct. 1 shootings.
When police leave and the Route 91 Harvest festival signage is taken down, property owner MGM Resorts International will have to figure out what to do with the site.
John Rich of Big & Rich says, “I will tell you, I’m sure there will be another Route 91 and I hope they invite us to play in it.”
Henderson resident Shannon Fleming is raising money for Las Vegas shooting victims on her website, wtfclothing.net, but she doesn’t know what to do with the money.
Officials with MGM Resorts International warned Oct. 1 shooting hero Jesus Campos that he could be facing difficult interviews just hours before he was set to make five TV appearances last week, the international president of the union representing Mandalay Bay security guards said Friday.
Las Vegas police officer Charleston Hartfield will be laid to rest today.
Danielle Kraze’s story seemed like yet another tragic tale from the Mandalay Bay mass shooting.
Five women, some of whom barely knew one another before the Route 91 Harvest festival, have formed a sort of makeshift support group to help one another through different stages of post-traumatic stress.
Thousands filled the Orleans Arena on Thursday for “Vegas Strong: A Night of Healing,” one concert that represented many things: a benefit for those impacted by the Route 91 Harvest tragedy, a communal display of shared grief and joy alike, a show of resilience in the face of the once-unthinkable.
A neuropathological examination of Las Vegas Strip gunman’s brain is being conducted at Stanford University. Here’s what it entails and what it could uncover.