Tomorrow will be one month since the largest mass shooting in modern US history.

On October 1, 2017, Stephen Paddock unloaded his weapons on a country music festival from his room at the Mandalay Bay Hotel in Las Vegas.

59 people were killed and 546 others were injured.

Police have still not explained his motive for the shooting. Paddock’s girlfriend and loudmouth brother have quietly disappeared. The witness gave one interview and went silent. The killer’s hard drive went missing. The hotel has not released any footage of the killer. It goes on and on…

The story has been revised numerous times and now this…

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Las Vegas police announced today 30 days after the shooting that an officer discharged his gun in the room the night of the shooting.

This is just coming out today — nearly 30 days later.

The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported:

A Metropolitan Police Department officer accidentally discharged his weapon inside the Mandalay Bay gunman’s suite the night of the Oct. 1 mass shooting, the Clark County sheriff confirmed Monday. The police firearm went off inside the suite sometime after officers made entry, the sheriff said. But the round or rounds were not fired in the same room where gunman Stephen Paddock was found dead with what has been described as a self-inflicted gunshot wound. “It happened and we’re investigating it, just like we do with any officer-involved use of force,” Sheriff Joe Lombardo told the Las Vegas Review-Journal. “Nobody was struck.” It’s unclear what caused the officer in question, who has not been named, to discharge his weapon. The sheriff also confirmed Monday that the 32nd floor of Mandalay Bay, where the gunman’s corner suite was located, did not have security cameras facing the gunman’s room or the stairwell door that Paddock had apparently sealed sometime before the mass shooting. The only cameras on the floor faced the elevators.

This may also be the worst police investigation in US history. And it makes you think the government is hiding details from the public.