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Las Vegas shooting: Ammunition dealer charged | Las Vegas shooting: Ammunition dealer charged |
(about 4 hours later) | |
A man who sold ammunition to Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock has been charged with conspiracy to manufacture and sell armour-piercing bullets without a licence. | A man who sold ammunition to Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock has been charged with conspiracy to manufacture and sell armour-piercing bullets without a licence. |
Police said they found Douglas Haig's fingerprints on unused ammunition at the hotel room from where Paddock shot dead 58 people last October. | Police said they found Douglas Haig's fingerprints on unused ammunition at the hotel room from where Paddock shot dead 58 people last October. |
Mr Haig earlier told a news conference he had nothing to do with the attack. | Mr Haig earlier told a news conference he had nothing to do with the attack. |
He said he had met Paddock in September and sold him 720 rounds of ammunition. | He said he had met Paddock in September and sold him 720 rounds of ammunition. |
Mr Haig, 55, of Mesa, Arizona, is the first person to be charged in connection with the mass shooting - the deadliest in modern US history. | Mr Haig, 55, of Mesa, Arizona, is the first person to be charged in connection with the mass shooting - the deadliest in modern US history. |
Paddock opened fire on hundreds of people attending a music concert from a 32nd floor window of the Mandalay Bay hotel. | Paddock opened fire on hundreds of people attending a music concert from a 32nd floor window of the Mandalay Bay hotel. |
When officers stormed the room they found Paddock dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He had smuggled 24 weapons and thousands of rounds of ammunition into the hotel concealed in 10 suitcases. | When officers stormed the room they found Paddock dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He had smuggled 24 weapons and thousands of rounds of ammunition into the hotel concealed in 10 suitcases. |
According to the charge sheet, investigators also found a cardboard box with Mr Haig's name and address on it that had contained some of the ammunition. | According to the charge sheet, investigators also found a cardboard box with Mr Haig's name and address on it that had contained some of the ammunition. |
Addressing the news conference, Mr Haig described Paddock as "very well dressed, very well groomed, very polite, very respectful". | |
He said that when Paddock visited him in Arizona he "told me what he wanted, I gathered it up, put it in a box, told him what he owed me. He paid me, put it in his car and drove away". | |
Mr Haig said he didn't believe Paddock had used the ammunition he had supplied, which were tracer bullets that leave a fiery trail behind them. | |
"You would have seen red streaks coming from the window and there weren't red steaks coming from the window," he said. | |
Mr Haig's lawyer, Marc Victor, suggested that if tracer rounds had been used, people on the ground would have been able to see the pattern of gunfire and shelter more effectively. | |
Mr Haig has been released on bail pending a preliminary hearing in Phoenix on 15 February. | Mr Haig has been released on bail pending a preliminary hearing in Phoenix on 15 February. |
If convicted he faces up to five years in prison. | If convicted he faces up to five years in prison. |
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