This is why people are going off the deep end and crafting their own theories. This right here.
According to that sourcelink, a new Vegas massacre timeline has been released.
In the first timeline, police said Stephen Paddock shot Mandalay Bay security guard Jesus Campos in the leg after unleashing the massacre. Police then revised it and said that Paddock shot Campos before opening fire on concertgoers. Paddock shot Campos at 9:59 p.m. and opened fire on the crowd six minutes later.
Then, they revised the timeline AGAIN and erased the whole “six minute gap” part. It all happened simultaneously.
Now we have ANOTHER timeline, reminiscent of the old one. According to the new timeline, Paddock shot Campos after opening fire on concertgoers.
A new timeline for the Las Vegas massacre has been released, putting the shooting of hotel security guard Jesus Campos just after the slaughter began rather than just before – as cops previously claimed.
Digital experts working for The New York Times analyzed 30 videos from the murderous rampage on October 1 to piece together a chronology of events.
They determined that 64-year-old Stephen Paddock began firing at the Route 91 Harvest festival concertgoers at 10.05pm, starting out with single shots.
According to The Times, Mandalay Bay security guard Campos was shot a minute later – at 10.06pm – and not before the massacre began, as police had said earlier.
Senior story producer Malachy Brown told CBS: ‘Ours isn’t the definitive picture of what happened. More information will emerge, but it does give us new insights into what happened.’
The rest of the “revised” timeline “mostly matches what police have reported in their latest briefings,” so that’s something.
Again, this isn’t the definitive timeline, but it certainly provides new insight.
Browne, in a separate article about the timeline, explained how the study was produced: ‘The process can be as simple as comparing a video with Google Street View to identify camera location or extracting file data with a smartphone app — or as difficult as analyzing each frame of a video and the amplitude and frequency of every second of audio.’
In case you missed Campos’ interview with Ellen, here you go:
[arve url=”https://www.youtube.com/embed/F7gj1FoRIfE”]
h/t Daily Mail