Mandalay Bay
Last night a short audio recording was released by MGM resorts to ABC News, allegedly of the moment when Mandalay Bay security guard Jesus Campos reported shooting from room 135 on the 32 floor of the hotel.

Listen below:

"Hey, there's shots fired in 32.....135..."
While MGM refused to say exactly when Campos made this call (presumably to security dispatch in the hotel), according to the official police/FBI timeline, the call must have been made at about 10:05pm just after Campos had been shot through the door of Paddock's room, with one of the bullets hitting him in the leg (up to 100 bullets were fired through the door at that point).

Does anyone else get the impression that, in this audio recording, Campos is far too relaxed for a person who had just been fired at with an assault rifle in a confined hallway, and injured in the process? Surely anyone in such a situation would be in full fight-or-flight mode, very animated/stressed in their speech, giving a sense of just how close to instant death they came. Why is Campos calmly relaying the information in this detached manner?

Along with this recording, it has also been revealed that Campos - who has almost completely avoided speaking publicly about the shooting - has been kept out of the public eye by his employers, MGM. The resort company is keeping the security guard in an unidentified hotel and paying his tab, according to Campos' lawyer, Frank Flansburg III.

Las Vegas attorney Will Kemp told the Review-Journal that this has raised suspicion that "they are trying to shape his testimony and don't want him to provide information to the public about the incident".

For a complete analysis of the serious problems with the official story around the Las Vegas massacre, see the following articles by Joe Quinn and Niall Bradley: