2 security guards fatally shot at Las Vegas hotel-casino
LAS VEGAS -- Two Las Vegas security guards were fatally shot Saturday while investigating a disturbance in a room at a hotel-casino and the suspected shooter is facing critical injuries after turning the gun on himself, police said. The gunman's motive wasn't known but investigators believe it was an isolated incident.
"I want you to know right now that this has nothing to do with terrorism," Capt. Robert Plummer told reporters outside the scene of the shooting.
The shooting happened before 7 a.m. at Arizona Charlie's Decatur, which is located west of the Las Vegas Strip. According to police, the suspect ran from the hotel-casino after the shooting and into a nearby neighborhood where he tried to enter two homes but the residents were able to keep him out.
The suspected shooter, identified by police as 29-year-old Christopher Olague, then ran to a nearby neighborhood and attempted to break into a home with a woman and several children inside, Lt. Dan McGrath said , CBS affiliate KLAS reports.
Police found him in a laundry room accessible through a garage of the second home after he appeared to have shot himself in the head. Medical responders rushed him to the hospital. Investigations told KLAS that he is not expected to survive.
The victims' identities were not released. Police said the uniformed security guards were a man and a woman in their 40s and that one was armed.
McGrath said the circumstances of what happened in the hotel room still unclear. The hotel-casino's office did not immediately return a message seeking comment.
The shooting comes a day before law enforcement officers expect tens of thousands of New Year's Eve revelers on the Strip and three months after the city dealt with the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
Officials have been trying to reassure residents and visitors that the city is safe, especially in the wake of the Oct. 1 shooting. A high-stakes gambler killed 58 people and injured hundreds more after he shattered the windows of his suite on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay hotel-casino on the Strip and unleashed gunfire on a country music festival below. He then killed himself.