MGM and victims of Oct. 1 reach settlement agreement – VIDEO
 
MGM and victims of Oct. 1 reach settlement agreement – VIDEO

MGM Resorts International and lawyers representing potentially thousands of victims of the Oct. 1, 2017, mass shooting on the Las Vegas Strip have reached a tentative settlement of between $735 million and $800 million. (Mat Luschek /Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Las Vegas shooting survivors gather at butterfly release event
 
Las Vegas shooting survivors gather at butterfly release event

A Nevada Highway Patrol trooper had an emotional reunion Sunday. Trooper Travis Smaka saw Leala Tyree for the first time since Oct. 1. The reunion happened at a butterfly release event at the Community Healing Garden. Tyree’s son drove a family to a hospital in his truck on Oct. 1. Smaka escorted her son through interstate traffic to the hospital. The injured woman and her father, who were in the truck’s bed, survived.

Route 91 vigil
 
Route 91 vigil

Survivors of the Oct. 1 mass shooting came together on Sunday near the south end of the Strip about a block from the Route 91 Harvest festival grounds where the attack happened.

Route 91 vigil
 
Route 91 vigil

Survivors of the Oct. 1 mass shooting gather on Sunday near the south end of the Strip about a block from the Route 91 Harvest festival grounds where the attach happened.

Two Route 91 survivors reunite
 
Two Route 91 survivors reunite

Miriam Lujan was seven months pregnant at the Route 91 Harvest festival. A stranger, Sue Ann Cornwell, ushered her out of the festival venue, shielding her belly. They recently reunited at the Las Vegas Community Healing Garden. Lujan’s son, Xander, is now nearly four months old. Briana Erickson/ Las Vegas Review-Journal

Man charged with making terroristic threats at Las Vegas church
 
Man charged with making terroristic threats at Las Vegas church

A man was arrested Wednesday after making terroristic threats at a Las Vegas church. Prosecutors say the man idolizes Route 91 Harvest festival gunman, Stephen Paddock, and told church members last month that he was planning “something big.” The man, 23-year-old Calin Hodges, was indicted Wednesday on a terrorism charge. According to the indictment, at least 40 people were at the church service when Hodges proclaimed he would become “the greatest mass shooter in history.” Police say they discovered a diary inside Hodges vehicle, that stated “Stephen Paddock had stolen his idea on 1 October” and that he also admired the Columbine High School shooters. Two judges have ordered that Hodges be held on $15,000 bail and confined to a mental health facility.

Grammy tribute to Las Vegas mass shooting victims
 
Grammy tribute to Las Vegas mass shooting victims

Three performers at last year’s Route 91 Harvest Festival will perform a tribute at this year’s Grammy Awards to honor the 58 people who were killed and the more than 500 who were wounded.
Eric Church, Maren Morris and Brothers Osborne will collaborate on a special performance at the 60th annual Grammy Awards on Jan. 28.
“There’s not a day that goes by since that day that I have not thought of it and thought of the people and the victims,” Church said.
The country artists will perform a classic Grammy-winning song, which hasn’t been announced.

2 Las Vegas hotel security guards shot to death
 
2 Las Vegas hotel security guards shot to death

The string of holiday season killings in the Las Vegas Valley continued Saturday morning when two security guards were gunned down inside a hotel room at Arizona Charlie’s Decatur hotel-casino.

Top 10 Las Vegas news stories of 2017
 
Top 10 Las Vegas news stories of 2017

The top 10 Las Vegas news stories of 2017
10. Mannequin used to catch suspect in killings of two homeless men 9. Controversy over plans to develop homes on open spaces like golf courses 8. The execution of Scott Dozier was scheduled, then canceled 7. O.J. Simpson released from prison 5. Trials and acquittals in the Bundy case 4. A rising number of sex arrests among CCSD employees 3. Recreational marijuana sales start in Nevada 2. CCSD uncovers $60 million budget deficit and makes hundreds of staff cuts 1. The Route 91 Harvest festival shooting leaves 58 dead and more than 500 people injured

Fundraising for Las Vegas Victims’ Fund lags behind other tragedies
 
Fundraising for Las Vegas Victims’ Fund lags behind other tragedies

The Las Vegas Victims’ Fund currently has around $17 million 58 people were killed and 546 people were injured during the Oct. 1 shooting Thousands more were at the Route 91 Harvest festival concert and are also in need of financial help In about the same amount of time, $61 million was raised for victims and survivors of the 2013 Boston Marathon attack $61 million raised for the 3 people who were killed and 246 who were injured Between mid-June 2016 and the end of September, $29.5 million was raised for victims and survivors of the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting $29.5 million for the 49 who were killed and the 68 who were injured The Las Vegas Victims’ Fund will stop collecting money Jan. 31, 2018

After Las Vegas shooting, 87 children cope with loss of parent
 
After Las Vegas shooting, 87 children cope with loss of parent

After the mass shooting in Las Vegas, 87 children are coping with the loss of a parent. Of the 58 people killed at the Route 91 Harvest festival, 33 were parents. The youngest child to lose a parent was just six weeks old when his mom, Rocio Guillen-Rocha, was killed. Losing a parent in such a public and traumatic way can send a child into a tailspin, UNLV clinical psychologist Michelle Paul says.