Haley Geftman-Gold has been fired from her job at CBS for saying she doesn't feel bad for Vegas victims

A top lawyer for CBS was fired after writing that she isn't sympathetic for the victims of the most deadly mass shooting in Modern United States history.

Hayley Geftman-Gold, 41, took to Facebook last night to write that she was 'not even sympathetic' to those killed or wounded because 'country music fans often are Republican.'

Geftman-Gold was promptly fired from her job as vice president and senior counsel at CBS.

The network said Monday that Geftman-Gold had violated the company's standards by expressing deeply unacceptable views.

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Last night after the shooting which left at least 59 dead and more than 500 wounded, Geftman-Gold wrote on Facebook that she was 'not even sympathetic' to those killed or wounded because 'country music fans often are Republican'

Three people lie on the ground, one covered in blood, after the shooting at the Route 91 Harvest country music festival on Sunday

After a gunman opened fire at the Route 91 Harvest Music Festival in Las Vegas on Sunday and killed at least 59 people and sent more than 500 to the hospital she went on Facebook to say she didn't feel bad for the victims.

The network said Monday that Geftman-Gold had violated the company's standards by expressing deeply unacceptable views

'If they wouldn't do anything when children were murdered I have no hope that Repugs (sic) will ever do the right thing,' she wrote in a post that was captured by the Daily Caller but has now been deleted.

'I'm actually not even sympathetic bc (sic) country music fans often are Republican gun toters (sic).'

She appeared to be referring to the lack of gun control legislation passed after the mass shooting at the Sandy Hook elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut in December 2012.

The tragedy, in which 20-year-old gunman Adam Lanza entered the elementary school and opened fire, killing 20 children and six adults, sparked intense political debates about gun control.

Geftman-Gold didn't work with the network's news division, and when the network was made aware of the comment she was fired.

Her LinkedIn profile says she had worked there since September 2016, and graduated from Columbia Law in 2000.

The Columbia and Penn graduate, who threw an election night party in honor of Hillary Clinton, lives with her husband and three young children in Brooklyn

She previously worked for MTV and graduated from Penn in 1997 before going to Columbia for law school.

The born and bred New Yorker now describes herself on Twitter bio as a 'mommy' and 'new media lawyer' who lives in Brooklyn.

The outspoken critic of Republicans also helped organize a block party for the Hillary Clinton last year.

She and a fellow Brooklyn resident planned the block party held at the intersection of President and Clinton streets on election night.

She and her husband Ryan have three children and live in Brooklyn Heights.

Haunting videos captured thousands of country music fans attempting to flee the carnage in Las Vegas after Stephen Paddock, 64, opened fire on the Route 91 Harvest Festival

A wounded person is walked in on a wheelbarrow after the Sunday night attack

Police say at least 59 people died and more than 527 were injured after the 64-year-old attacked concert-goers with an 'arsenal' of weapons from a room inside the Mandalay Bay Hotel

Sunday night's attack happened during the Route 91 Harvest Musical Festival, while Jason Aldean was playing.

One moment victims were dancing at a country music concert, they next they were fleeing for their lives from the worst mass shooting in US history.

The suspected shooter is 64-year-old Stephen Paddock (pictured) who died at the scene

The suspected shooter, Stephen Paddock, died at the scene.

Haunting videos captured the moment joy turned to bloody tragedy for thousands of music fans as they were cut down by staccato volleys of machine gun fire.

The wounded were rushed to safety on office chairs, in wheelbarrows, and in trucks and cars as the carnage unfolded over 72 horrifying minutes.

Russell Bleck, who witnessed the attack on the Route 91 Music Festival, told how some people plugged bullet wounds with their fingers.

'While everyone else was crouching I saw police officers standing up as targets, just trying to direct people and tell them where to go.

'The amount of bravery I saw there, words can't describe what it was like.'

Speaking about the moment gunman Stephen Paddock opened fire, he added: 'He was just spraying the crowd, it was relentless, there was no stopping, maybe five or eight seconds to move from cover to cover to try and get out as he reloaded.'

Police say at least 59 people died and more than 515 were injured after Paddock, 64, attacked concert-goers with an 'arsenal' of weapons from a room inside the Mandalay Bay Hotel.