by performing at events, such as the opening night reception of an exhibit the Clark County Museum debuted in honor of the anniversary.He was watching Jason Aldean perform when a man began shooting from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Hotel on the Las Vegas Strip.The bursts of bullets kept coming – more than a thousand rounds altogether.
He described the gunshots as never-ending, as they tried to make their way to the exit, which proved to be another challenge."Wherever I go, whether it's in a hotel or a concert, I make myself aware of what the exits are and people surrounding it. I never did too much of that before [the shooting]," Amico said."One of the things that made me aware of that was on October 1, a lot of people didn't know where to go.
Shae Diaz, left, went to the 2017 Route 91 Harvest Music Festival with her family. She survived the Las Vegas massacre, which left 58 people dead that night. Diaz remembers being frustrated that her sister, then 17, had left her to go back to their hotel room at the Mandalay Bay. She wasn’t feeling well.
A line of men was on the other side of the fence helping people over. Diaz still has scars from climbing over.
Equally, we must never forget the GOP was totally okay with what happened in Las Vegas. The U.S. is a mess with gun extremists.