
New photos show the horrifying scene SWAT teams encountered when they blew the door off the Las Vegas shooter's room and found him dead inside - as authorities reveal the mass murderer set up cameras in a door peephole and on a room service cart outside the room to warn him when police arrived.

The photos, leaked Tuesday, show Stephen Paddock's body on the floor of his suite in the Mandalay Bay resort and casino, which he used as a sniper's nest on Sunday night to open fire on 22,000 innocent people attending a music festival across the street.

Only the 64-year-old's legs, torso and left arm are visible in the photo, and he wears a typical outfit for a retiree: a brown long-sleeve t-shirt, black slacks and slip on loafers with white socks. The only thing that reveals his nefarious actions are the black gloves he's wearing.

Next to him, on a table, is what looks like a note written on pink paper, underneath what appears to be either an ashtray or a roll of green tape. Police have not yet remarked on what - if anything - the paper might say.

On the floor next to the body are two assault rifles, dozens of spent shells and a hammer - which he presumably used to shatter two windows in his two-room suite which he then used to shoot out of.

One of the assault rifles has a 'bump stock' added to it - making effectively fully automatic - allowing him to unleash hundreds of rounds per minute.

The branding on the gun indicates it was made by Daniel Defense, a Savannah-Georgia-based company which produces variants of the AR-15 rifle, based off the U.S. Army's M16. Another gun appears to be under his body.

Another photo shows how he pushed two sitting chairs together to form a cradle-like space to store at least two other rifles. Another AR-15-style rifle is seen at the foot of chairs with an extended magazine that would allow him to shoot for longer before reloading.

Behind a nearby pillar, about 15 magazines are piled in neat stacks. It's unclear if they are loaded or spent.

A SWAT team located Paddock in his room about 72 minutes after the beginning of the deadly attack - but cops estimate he only fired on the crowd for 9-11 minutes, starting at 10:08pm.

Police say he shot at officers as they breached the door, but by the time they made it into the suite, Paddock had committed suicide.

Paddock killed 58 in the attack and injured 527. His death brought the total death count to 59.

On Tuesday, Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo said they had identified all but three of the victims, and that the injured county might be slightly off because one of the hospitals was double counting patients. However, he didn't release a revised injured number.

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A leaked photo shows the Vegas shooter's body after he committed suicide in his hotel room Sunday night. Police are now investigating who leaked the images. There also appears to be a note on the table (in red circle)

Stephen Paddock broke two windows in his Mandalay Bay hotel room on Sunday, and then opened fire on 22,000 attending a concert across the street. Fifty-nine people were killed and 527 injured

The photos leaked Tuesday show several assault rifles strewn across the room, which is littered with spent bullet casings. Behind the pillar above, neat piles of stacked magazines are seen

Pictured above is the first glimpse inside Paddock's hotel room, showing the debris left when SWAT teams blew open the door. The peephole in the door hid a camera he used to spy on the hallway

To the right of the doors was a room service cart, covered with empty plates. Paddock set up another camera on the cart to watch the hall. A third camera in the room filmed the shooter. All footage is being examined by the FBI

In a Tuesday night conference, Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said that an investigation was underway to find out who leaked the photographs.

Speaking at the same press conference, Jill Sneider of the ATF said that no less than 12 of the rifles found in the room had bump-stock modifications.

In total, there were 23 firearms in the hotel room, including an AK-47, an AR-15-type gun, and a handgun.

But Paddock had still more guns stored in his two houses in Verdi, outside Reno, and Mesquite, bringing the total across all thee locations to 47, she said.

They included rifles, shotguns and handguns bought from Nevada, Texas, Utah and California. All had been bought - legally - over the course of more than 20 years.

Also on Tuesday, video was released showing debris strewn outside the shooter's hotel room, from when the SWAT team blew the doors off the front door.

The video shows bullet holes piercing the left side of the suite's double doors, confirming reports that Paddock shot at officers as they tried to break into the room. However, most of the door is knocked down from the SWAT team's forceful - but necessary - entrance.

Outside the door, debris littered the carpeting in the hallway and crime scene tape covers the entrance to the room; just inside, yet another assault rifle set up on the ground, on a bipod.

At a press conference on Tuesday afternoon, Lombardo confirmed that Paddock had cameras set up inside and outside of his room - including one on the food service cart. The peephole camera was revealed Tuesday evening by McMahill.

The cameras outside the room appear to have been used to warn Lombardo when police were outside. A source told the Washington Post that the cameras outside the room were connected to a tablet which streamed live footage of the hallway.

Cameras were also found inside the room, apparently to film the massacre. All of the footage is now being examined by the FBI.

'The fact that he had the type of weaponry and amount of weaponry in that room, it was preplanned extensively,' the sheriff said, 'and I'm pretty sure he evaluated everything that he did and his actions, which is troublesome.'

Lombardo said the investigation is proceeding cautiously in case charges are warranted against someone else.

'This investigation is not ended with the demise of Mr. Paddock,' the sheriff said. 'Did this person get radicalized unbeknownst to us? And we want to identify that source.'

On the ground behind the double doors, one of Paddock's 23 firearms is seen set up on the ground with a bipod

Two investigators walk down the hallway, away from the scene

An investigator works in the room at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino where a gunman opened fire from on a music festival Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2017, in Las Vegas

Also in the press conference on Tuesday evening, McMahill defended police for taking 72 minutes to breach the room where Paddock was holed up after first shots were reported at 10:08pm on Sunday.

McMahill said that patrol officers who had been managing the music festival quickly entered the hotel and began working their way up to the 32nd floor, where Paddock was located, evacuating each floor as they went - but that police couldn't act until the SWAT team arrived.

He also said that Paddock's gunfire ceased at around 10:19pm - 59 minutes before his room was breached. At that point, he said, SWAT stopped regarding Paddock as an active shooter and treated him as a less urgent barricade situation, since he was isolated in the room.

McMahill didn't make it clear exactly when the SWAT team was in place, but said that at 10:38pm, a security guard approaching Paddock's room was non-fatally shot. The guard, who is still in hospital, sent 'digital information' to cops, McMahill said.

Details of that incident have not yet been released, but it seems likely that Paddock spotted the guard approaching using the cameras he installed in the door's peephole and in a room service cart he'd left in the hallway.

SWAT raided the room at 11:20pm - something the McMahill said was acceptable because Paddock was no longer shooting and was barricaded in. He said the SWAT team was 'unconventional,' being made up of SWAT members, patrol cops and a K-9 unit.

Photos have emerged of two of the 23 firearms found in Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock's hotel room. The weapon on the left has a bump stock added to make it fully automatic, a scope for accuracy and an oversize magazine to hold more ammunition. The weapon on the right has markings indicating it was made by Daniel Defense, a bipod for stability, and a telescopic lens

The Mandalay Bay resort and casino pictured above on Tuesday, as investigators continue to investigate the shooting

Natalie Vanderstay answers questions from her hospital bed at University Medical Center on Tuesday. Vanderstay was shot in the stomach, and suffered a leg injury after Paddock opened fire

Elsewher it was revealed that Paddock was prescribed anti-anxiety medication Valium back in June, which has been linked to increased aggressive behavior in multiple studies.

Paddock was taking 10 milligram tablets at the time of the massacre, though it is not known why he was prescribed them or whether he had underlying behavioral issues.

On Tuesday it emerged that Paddock may have previously planned to attack another open-air music festival, which was held from September 22-24.

The Life is Beautiful festival was based five and a half miles from where Paddock claimed 58 lives on Sunday, and took place across 15 blocks of Downtown Vegas.

Paddock had apparently attempted to book rooms at the Ogden, a luxury condo tower that overlooked the festival, as well as a hotel with festival views, an inside source told CBS.

He requested specific suites at both locations, but moved on when he discovered they were booked, the source claimed.

That raises the grim possibility that he'd intended to turn either location into sniper nests, like the one he built in the Mandalay Bay hotel on Sunday, prior to his horrific killing spree.

The Ogden is only 21 stories tall, whereas the rooms he booked in the Mandalay Bay hotel were on the 32nd floor.

That would likely have changed the distance he would have been able to fire, but had he cleared the 330 yards fired on Sunday, he could have struck 11 of the festival's 15 blocks, including the one housing the main stage, which was directly north of the Ogden.

Among the bands playing on that stage at this year's festival were Chance the Rapper, Muse, Lorde, The XX and Gorillaz. This year the festival attracted 45,000 people per day.

The Daily Beast was the first to report Paddock's alleged interest in The Ogden. Their source, speaking before CBS's lead came forward, suggested he had successfully booked 'multiple condos'.

The source said that Paddock may have lost his nerve or changed his plans for some other reason before setting up a kill zone outside the Mandalay Bay. CBS's source later contradicted that, saying the suites he wanted were booked up.

Paddock (seen here in an undated photo) made a fortune in real estate, his brother said. It also emerged on Tuesday that he may have previously targeted another music festival, held five and a half miles from where Sunday's shooting occurred

Police are investigating the possibility that he had initially planned to shoot at the Life is Beautiful Festival (pictured), which was held across 15 blocks of Downtown Vegas from 22-24 September. On Sunday he attacked the Route 91 Harvest music fest

This is the view of the festival in 2016 from The Ogden, which promoted itself as being at the heart of Life is Beautiful. An earlier report said the Paddock had successfully rented condos there, and it was speculated he may have got cold feet

The Odgen itself (pictured) promoted itself as being at the heart of Life is Beautiful during the festival, which took place on the blocks at the rear of this photo, to the left and right

Police sources say he attempted to rent specific condos at the Ogden and another unnamed hotel overlooking the festival (which occupied the blocks within the blue lines)

Investigators are still struggling to determine what caused Paddock, a retiree with only a traffic infraction on his criminal record, to carry out the attack.

But his behavior in the week before the shooting may provide clues to his dark plans.

On Tuesday, it was revealed that Paddock wired $100,000 to an account in this girlfriend Marilou Danley's native Philippines sometime in the week before the attack, according to NBC News. Danley, 62, was in the Philippines when Paddock carried out the attack, but it's unclear if the money was intended for her. She is now en route back to the U.S., to speak with authorities. Sheriff Lombardo called her a person of interest in a Tuesday press conference.

Paddock was in a relationship with Marilou Danley (left), who was out of the country at the time of the shooting. She is considered a person of interest, but is returning to the U.S. to speak with authorities

Sources also told NBC News that Paddock went on a gambling spree in the two weeks before the attack, gambling amounts between $20,000 and $30,000 on multiple occasions in that time period. In total, he gambled with at least $160,000.

However, it's unknown whether those high-stakes gambles resulted in wins or loses for Paddock.

On the surface, Paddock didn't seem like a typical mass murderer, said Clint Van Zandt, a former FBI hostage negotiator and supervisor in the bureau's behavioral science unit. Paddock is much older than the typical shooter and was not known to be suffering from mental illness.

'My challenge is, I don't see any of the classic indicators, so far, that would suggest, 'OK, he's on the road either to suicide or homicide or both,' Van Zandt said.

The retired accountant had worked as an internal auditor at Lockheed Martin for three years in the late 1980s, and was a manager and investor in apartment complexes located in Mesquite, Texas and California, which made him millions, his brother said, according to the Las Vegas Sun.

Local police said they had no run-ins with the man, not even traffic violations, and his brother described him as 'just a guy who lived in Mesquite who drove down and gambled in Las Vegas and... liked burritos'.

So the discovery that he had used 10 suitcases to methodically move an arsenal up into his Mandalay Bay room over the preceding weekend came as a shock to those who knew him.

Eric Paddock said he thought his brother was far from a gun fanatic.

'He had a couple of guns but they were all handguns, legal... he might have had one long gun, but he had them in a safe,' he said.

He said he didn't know about the 23 guns that were found in the hotel room.

Toni Reicher (right) hugs her daughter as nearby church bells ring during a vigil on Tuesday in Orlando, Florida, to show solidarity with the Las Vegas victims. Until Sunday, the worst-ever mass shooting was in Orlando's Pulse gay club last year

Family members of those injured or killed in the mass shooting tearfully gather at the Family Assistance Center in Las Vegas on Tuesday

VEGAS GUNMAN'S DEVASTATING ARSENAL REVEALED Las Vegas butcher Stephen Paddock amassed 42 firearms before carrying out his massacre, 23 of which were found inside the hotel room he used for his massacre. The majority of those weapons were rifles, though at least one was a handgun. Two rifles had been modified with tripods and scopes, greatly increasing their accuracy, and at least two had been modified to allow for something close to fully-automatic fire. Thousands of rounds of ammunition were also found, ranging in caliber from .223 - similar to 5.56 rounds which are standard for NATO troops - to .308, which are typically used for hunting rifles. While the exact extent of Paddock's cache is not yet clear, we know it included: 1) Four DDM4 rifles, the LA Times reports. Manufactured by Daniel Defense, the rifle features a muzzle flash suppressor, making it harder to tell where the weapon is being fired from. It also has a freefloat rail allowing for a variety of attachments including scopes and grips to enhance stability. The rifle costs $1,900 if bought new Four DDM4 rifles - made by Daniel Defense - were among the 23 weapons found in Paddock's hotel room by the SWAT team after they busted in. They sell for around $1,700 2) Three FN-15 rifles. Made by FN America, they also feature a muzzle flash suppressor and 'H buffer system', which reduces recoil and increases accuracy. FN-15 refers to a series of rifles, rather than a specific weapon, which range from smaller carbines to replicas of the military-issue M16. It is not known exactly which version was owned by Paddock. They range in price from $1,000 to $2,000, if bought new Also in his terrifying arsenal were three of these FN-15 rifles, as well as guns made by Sig Sauer. Some of the semi-automatic guns had been fitted with bump-stocks that allow for, essentially, fully automatic fire. They're priced around $1,300 3) At least one AK-47. A Russian-designed assault rifle, it was used by the country's military from 1945 and is still used by armies and rebel groups around the world. Known for its simplicity and reliability, it fires 7.62x39mm rounds which makes it less accurate but more devastating than other semi-automatic rifles. It can retail for as little as $600 An AK-47 was also found in the room with the other weapons. AKs can come with fully automatic fire functions, but it's not known if that was the case here. AKs vary in price depending on the manufacturer, but cost around $1,000 4) At least one Colt AR-15. This rifle is known as the most popular in America, with an estimated 8million in homes around the country. It is also gaining a dubious reputation as the weapon of choice for mass shooters, from movie theatre killer James Holmes to San Bernardino terrorist Omar Mateen A Colt AR-15 was also found in the room. Such weapons are semi-automatic when bought legally and cost around $1,000. At least one full-auto weapon was found, but it's not known if it was modified or had that function when manufactured 5) Two 'bump stocks'. While not weapons in themselves, these stocks modify semi-automatic weapons allowing for something close to fully-automatic fire. They fit over the stock of a semi-auto rifle, and function by allowing the weapon to 'bump' back and forth as it is fired using the weapon's recoil. Each bump brings the user's finger down on the trigger, firing a round. This allows users to skirt around regulations prohibiting fully-automatic weapons. Advertisement

Inside the nest: The smashed windows from the suite taken out by Paddock at the Mandalay Hotel in Las Vegas

A woman cries while hiding inside the Sands Corporation plane hangar after the mass shooting on Sunday

Why Paddock (pictured with girlfriend Marilou Danley, 62) shot up the crowd is unknown. He had no religious or political affiliations, no military background, and was known to have just a couple of handguns, his brother said

A law enforcement source told the Wall Street Journal that they found at least one fully automatic rifle among the batch, which included AR-15-style rifles and AK-47-style rifles.

And it later emerged that two other semi-auto guns had been legally modified with bump-stocks that allow them to function like fully-automatic rifles, pumping out 400-800 bullets a minute.

The device basically replaces the gun's shoulder rest, with a 'support step' that covers the trigger opening. By holding the pistol grip with one hand and pushing forward on the barrel with the other, the shooter's finger comes in contact with the trigger. The recoil causes the gun to buck back and forth, 'bumping' the trigger.

Technically, that means the finger is pulling the trigger for each round fired, keeping the weapon a legal semi-automatic.

Still others could have been properly converted into fully automatic fire, the LA Times reported.

Among the weapons found in the room were four Daniel Defense DDM4 rifles, three FN-15s and other rifles made by Sig Sauer. A handgun was also found.

Sheriff Lombardo said on Tuesday that he couldn't comment on whether the rifles had been modified to be automatic, but he did say that they were aware of reports that bump stops were involved.

He said that the ammunition ranged in size from .308, usually used in hunting rifles, to .223, associated with AR-15s and other assault rifles - the latter being military-grade, the New York Daily News reported.

Eric said the revelation of his brother's deadly plan, which saw thousands of rounds falling on a crowd of 22,000 people at a music festival below, was as unexpected as seeing a meteor suddenly landing on his street.

The shocks only grew in number Monday as police raided two of Paddock's properties.

The first was his Mesquite home in a sleepy retirement community, which he purchased for just over $369,000 in 2015 according to public records.

What they found was a second arsenal, even bigger than the one in the Mandalay Bay room.

Some 19 additional firearms were in the house, along with the explosive Tannerite - which is used to make explosive targets for target practice - and several thousand rounds of ammunition, Lombardo said Monday.

He added that electronic devices were also found, but that they are still being examined to determine their purpose.

Photos of the property showed the garage door torn off its hinge and crumpled after the search.

Above, the view from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay hotel, in an updated photo. The concert was taking place diagonally across the street, where the stage is seen, with its green roof.

Investigators load bodies from the scene of the mass shooting on Monday; the mass shooting that occurred on Sunday is the deadliest in American history

He lived at the $400,000 property (pictured with crumpled garage door after police raid) with Danley. The home is in a quiet retirement community in which residents must be over 55. Cops found 19 guns there, plus explosives

Bomb experts were included in the SWAT deployment due to the fear that Paddock may have left booby traps at the home. Explosives had been found in his Mesquite house, and fertilizer used in bomb-making found in his car in Las Vegas

Student mourners console each other during a candlelight vigil at the University of Nevada Las Vegas (UNLV) for victims of a mass shooting

Left: Gabby Phillips, Sam Alworth, Ana Preciado and Evan Dixon embrace during a vigil on the Las Vegas strip. Right: Aryanna Williams, 6, and Mickey Deustch, 8, also paying tribute to the victims of the mass murder

Mourners pay tribute at a makeshift memorial consisting of dozens of candles on the Las Vegas Strip

Mourners pay tribute at a makeshift memorial on the Las Vegas Strip for the victims of a mass shooting in Las Vegas

Police also found the fertilizer ammonium nitrate - which can be used to make bombs - in Paddock's car in Las Vegas on Monday.

GUN SELLERS: KILLER 'SEEMED NORMAL' Two men who have admitted to selling weapons to Paddock said that he seemed normal at the time. Christopher Sullivan, general manager of Guns & Guitars in Mesquite, Nevada, told the New York Times that he sold Paddock a handgun and two rifles. He said Paddock had passed standard federal screening checks, and seemed like 'a normal fellow, a normal guy - nothing out of the ordinary.' 'As for what goes on in a person's mind, I couldn't tell you,' he added. 'I know nothing about him personally.' Chris Michel, the owner of Dixie GunWorx in St George, Utah, told St George News that Paddock came into his store three times, and bought one shotgun. Paddock was an 'average, everyday Joe Blow,' Michel said. 'Nobody that stood out; no red flags'. He said Paddock seemed 'mellow' and 'not uptight'; a 'grandpa next door'. In the past, he has denied potential gun buyers their purchases if they appear to be 'sketchy', he said. 'With him, we didn't have that feeling. None of the staff had any red flags whatsoever.' Advertisement

A SWAT team also raided a second property owned by Paddock in Reno on Monday. Bomb experts were on hand, due to concerns over booby traps.

Police have not yet revealed what, if anything, they found there. Speaking on Monday evening, police said that the scene was still being examined by detectives.

Although ISIS have repeatedly attempted to claim credit for the shooting, saying Paddock had recently converted to Islam, both his brother and authorities have dismissed the claims.

He had 'no religious affiliation, no political affiliation,' Eric said, adding: 'He just hung out.'

He also had no Army training, nor expressed any particular interest in guns, Eric added - though he admitted that, as he lives in Florida, he had not spoken much with his brother over the last year.

'His life is an open book. It's all in public record,' he said. 'Once again, there is nothing. He went to college. He had a job.'

Paddock had both hunting and fishing licenses according to public records, as well as his pilot's license, but no criminal record in the state of Nevada.

Only his gambling habit stood out as unusual; Stephen would play $100 hands of video poker, and 'once texted me a picture that he won $40,000 on a slot machine,' Eric said.

Neighbors at one of his properties in Florida said that they had barely talked to him - that he gave them keys to check on the property, and would only turn up every three months or so.

When he did, they said, he would rarely be seen because he stayed up late at night playing poker online.

Law enforcement officials said that in recent weeks he had made a number of transactions in Las Vegas that were in the tens of thousands of dollars.

On some days he spent more than $30,000, and on others more than $20,000, according to an individual who had seen Paddock's Multiple Currency Transaction Reports.

It's not known whether he made money back on any recent bets, or lost it.

Fifty-nine people are dead and 527 have been left injured after the Sunday shooting at the Las Vegas music festival

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

A man lies on top of a woman as others flee the music festival grounds. She appears to be alive and moving

Donald Trump is seen here holding a moment of silence for the slain people on the South Lawn of the White House. He denounced the violence as 'evil' and offered his 'warmest condolences' to the families of the victims

The usually colorful lights on New York's Empire State Building (left) were turned off on Monday night in recognition of the atrocity. In Paris, France, lights were switched off on the Eiffel Tower (right) in respect for the victims

VEGAS GUNMAN WAS A 'VERY, VERY SICK INDIVIDUAL,' SAYS PRESIDENT TRUMP President Donald Trump is calling the man who killed 58 people and wounded hundreds others at a music festival in Las Vegas a 'very, very sick individual.' Trump spoke to reporters Tuesday as he departed for a trip to hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico. He called the gunman 'demented' and said 'we're looking into him very seriously.' Trump also praised Las Vegas police, saying they had done an 'incredible job.' Trump stressed that the shooting was a tragedy. Asked about gun laws, the president said 'we'll be talking about gun laws as time goes by.' Advertisement

Paddock lived in Mesquite with his 62-year-old girlfriend Marilou Danley.

In his private life, Paddock enjoyed country shows on the Las Vegas Strip - such as the one he eventually attacked.

Paddock's time in Las Vegas wasn't totally without event, however; in 2012 he filed a lawsuit against Cosmopolitan Hotels & Resorts after he slipped and fell on a wet floor.

Paddock spent two years in court fighting his case after submitting his initial complaint citing 'Negligence - Premises Liability'.

It was ultimately dismissed with prejudice in late 2014, and exact details of the case were not available on the Clark County Courts website.

Paddock was also the son of Benjamin Hoskins Paddock, a serial bank robber who ended up on the FBI Most Wanted list back in 1969 when he escaped from federal prison in Texas while serving a 20-year sentence.

The FBI kept him on the list for the next eight years, and he was eventually found one year after he was removed from the list in 1978 - when he attracted attention for opening Oregon's first legal bingo hall.

The agency said that the fugitive had been 'diagnosed as psychopathic' and also had possible 'suicidal tendencies.'

The oldest of four children, Paddock was 7 when his father was arrested for the robberies. A neighbor, Eva Price, took him swimming while FBI agents searched the family home.

She told the Tucson Citizen at the time: 'We're trying to keep Steve from knowing his father is held as a bank robber. I hardly know the family, but Steve is a nice boy. It's a terrible thing.'

Stephen Craig Paddock pictured (in the middle of the back row) as a junior in 1970. He went to John H. Francis Polytechnic High School in Sun Valley, California. He is shown posing for the tennis team. Forty-seven years later, he committed a massacre in Las Vegas

Christopher Sullivan, general manager of Guns & Guitars in Mesquite, Nevada, told the New York Times that he sold Paddock a handgun and two rifles. He said Paddock had passed standard federal screening checks, and seemed like 'a normal fellow'

At a Monday afternoon press conference, Sheriff Lombardo said that Paddock started preparing for the attack soon after he checked into his two-room suite at the Mandalay Bay last Thursday. He used 10 suitcases to ferry in his weapons, and staff were unaware of what was inside. Police have not revealed when he started bringing the suitcases up to his room.

When a reporter asked why no one thought Paddock suspicious, Lombardo responded: 'I wish that would've happened, ma'am. I absolutely wish that would've happened.'

Paddock had committed suicide by the time police breached the door to his room on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort just after 10pm on Sunday night.

The attack played out as Jason Aldean performed on stage to close out the third and final day of the Route 91 Harvest Music Festival, which was taking place across the street from the resort.

Over 22,000 people were in attendance at the sold-out event, and described the attack as 'nonstop gunfire,' which only stopped when Paddock went to reload his weapon.

Police said in a press conference early Monday that Paddock's death was the result of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

During the chaos, claims of multiple shooters, bombings and suspicious cars circulated, but police said they were only rumors.