LAS VEGAS -- Authorities trying to piece together the final days before Stephen Paddock unleashed his arsenal of powerful firearms on country music fans on the Las Vegas Strip have at least one potential trove of information: his gambling habits.
Nevada gambling regulators say they're sorting through documents for clues about him and his girlfriend, Marilou Danley.
Those can include suspicious transaction or currency reports, as well
as information from a player's rewards card, which the casinos use to
track their gambling and offer perks.
Paddock's brother has described the gunman as a high-stakes video poker player who was routinely comped rooms, meals and drinks at casinos.
"He was a substantial gambler. It was a job to him," Eric Paddock said.
PlayVideo
Police release shooting timeline in Las Vegas Massacre
Paddock said that his brother wasn't insane or crazy, and described him as a highly "intelligent" and "successful" person.
He
said it was fun to be friends with his brother because "he was a rich
guy" who hung out in casino hotels but didn't have a lot of friends. He
called him an independently wealthy man who basically gambled for a
living.
A person who has seen Mandalay Bay hotel records that have
been turned over to investigators said Wednesday they show Paddock was
given his room on the 32nd floor for free because he was a good customer
who wagered tens of thousands of dollars each time he visited. The
individual was not authorized to speak publicly and disclosed the
information to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.
Las Vegas music festival shooting
A.G. Burnett, the head of Nevada's Gaming Control Board, said
investigators are looking for enforcement actions, for any disputes
Paddock may have had as a casino patron and at any federally required
currency reports of transactions he made greater than $10,000.
Paddock didn't' leave a suicide note, Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo says.
"While
we have already spoken to many people who have contacted with Stephen
Paddock at hotels and places he frequented, we still have more
interviews to conduct," Lombardo said.
Lombardo said the evolving profile of Paddock is one of someone he "would call disturbed and dangerous."
Here are the victims of the Las Vegas shooting
The
massacre has brought new attention to the world of high-limit video
poker and casino comps where high-rollers are given all sorts of free
items to keep them gambling. The biggest gamblers - often known as
whales - can get such perks as chartered planes, butlers and free
lodging at a $35,000-a-night villa.
Paddock's brother said he
wasn't at that level, but he gambled enough that he got free rooms,
poolside cabanas and high-end sushi meals exceeding $1,000.
America's deadliest mass shootings
"He won cars and $250,000 checks and all this stuff from the hotel," Eric Paddock said.
Video
poker machines are a mainstay at casinos around Nevada, with most of
the machines placed in bars where gamblers can play poker from their bar
stools for 25 cents a hand. They look similar to slot machines.
Paddock
favored the high-dollar variety version of the game, whose machines are
separate from the main video poker and slot areas. Players like Paddock
use strategies that can minimize the house winnings and in some cases
gain a minuscule mathematical advantage.
Michael Shackleford, who
runs a gambling strategy website called The Wizard of Odds, said based
on what is known of Paddock's life, the gunman seems to have been what
the casinos refer to as a "premium mass" player - one who bets in higher
amounts, with a better understanding of the game than the typical
player.
Premium mass players pay close attention to the odds in
the game they're playing and the payout, and they typically need access
to a lot of money because they may have long dry spells where they lose
exorbitant amounts.
Eventually, Shackleford said, if players stay
true to a perfect strategy - one designed to maximize their performance
over the long haul, such as by getting rid of potentially decent cards
like low pairs to increase chances of a big-payout royal flush - their
luck will turn, based on statistics, and they'll break even or come
close to it. When you add in the freebies from the casino, the player
can come out ahead.
"Vegas is full of people that are basically
just gambling for free," Shackleford said. "I think the shooter was one
of these people who was basically milking the system, getting free
vacations."
Mystery of viral photo from Vegas shooting solved
Why do the casinos have games where the players can come out ahead?
"It's
because there are so many bad players," Shackleford said. "For every
skilled player, there are probably 100 lousy players. They subsidize the
skilled players."
The stress of having so much on the line isn't for everyone, he said.
"In
any form of gambling, you need a strong stomach and you need to have a
very cool head about the ups and down," he said. "If this guy was a
millionaire, it's quite possible he was not bothered by the ups and
down. He probably had steel nerves and was a difficult person to move
emotionally."
It's unknown how much he wagered, but he apparently had been wagering more than $10,000 a day in some cases.
Authorities
have said Paddock used Danley's loyalty rewards card with MGM Resorts
International. The tiered program allows players to accumulate credits
and get perks such as bonuses on points earned playing slots, priority
hotel check-in and - for those who belong to the highest and
by-invitation-only level - limousine service to and from the airport.
"(The
casinos) know whether he lost money because he never would have gambled
for a second without putting the card in," Eric Paddock said.
Stephen Paddock: Motive of Las Vegas gunman may lie in his gambling habits
Reviewed by info_impromises
on
October 07, 2017
Rating: 5
No comments: