Stephen Paddock had anti-anxiety drugs in his system but was not under the influence of them, a report says.
The much anticipated autopsy report on Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock did nothing to help explain why he carried out the deadliest shooting in modern U. S. history — his body didn’t hold diseases or drugs or other substances that could have caused aggressive behavior.
In fact, it showed he was a sober, healthy 64-year-old.
The report — released Friday in response to a lawsuit by The Associated Press and the Las Vegas Review-Journal — showed gunman Stephen Paddock had anti-anxiety drugs in his system but was not under the influence of them.
Paddock unleashed a barrage of bullets from his high-rise hotel suite into a crowd at a country music festival below, killing 58 people and injuring more than 800 others on Oct. 1. He fatally shot himself before officers stormed his hotel suite after the mass shooting.
The autopsy showed the 6-foot-1 Paddock was slightly overweight at 224 pounds, had high blood pressure and bad teeth. But there was nothing unusual in his physical condition, even after a microscopic brain examination conducted by experts at Stanford University. His cremated remains were released to his brother in January.
A preliminary report about the shooting released last month said Paddock had been on a losing streak, was obsessed with cleanliness, possibly bipolar and was having difficulties with his live-in girlfriend. But investigators still haven’t answered the key question in the investigation: what led him to commit the mass shooting?
Investigators believe Paddock acted alone and he did not leave a suicide note or manifesto before he was found dead in the room. Police found 23 rifles and a handgun in his hotel suite and more than a dozen of the rifles were fitted with « bump stock » devices that allowed rapid-fire shooting similar to fully automatic weapons.
His live-in girlfriend, Marilou Danley, told investigators that the 64-year-old had become « distant » in the year before the shooting and their relationship was no longer intimate, according to the preliminary police report released in January.
Danley had described him as germophobic and told investigators he had reacted strongly to smells. Paddock told his friends and relatives that he always felt ill, in pain and fatigued, the report said.
His doctor suspected he may have had bipolar disorder but Paddock had refused to discuss that possibility, the doctor told police. The doctor offered him antidepressants but Paddock would only accept a prescription for anxiety medication. Paddock was fearful of medication and often refused to take it, the doctor told investigators.
On Friday, a judge ordered the AP and Review-Journal to return copies of a redacted autopsy of an off-duty police officer who was killed in the massacre and barred the media organizations from further reporting the details of Officer Charleston Hartfield’s autopsy.
The AP was immediately appealing the ruling, said Brian Barrett, the news cooperative’s associate general counsel.
The autopsy record was one of 58 that another judge ordered the Clark County coroner’s office to release last week to the two news organizations. The redacted documents had case numbers, names, ages, hometowns and racial characteristics of victims blacked out.
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Balsamo reported from Los Angeles.