From the LA times:
Why did it take police so long to breach Las Vegas gunman's room? Here's a new timeline
http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-la...e-police-so-long-to-1507174474-htmlstory.html
With a question like that as the headline, you'd figure they would supply an answer... read for yourself.
"There was a reason for the delay, Lombardo said. Officers actually reached Paddock's hotel room door on the 32nd floor within 12 minutes of the first shots being fired, "which is phenomenal," the sheriff said.
The shots had stopped 10 minutes after they started, according to the new timeline, which factors in information recorded on police officers' body cameras and closed-circuit television footage from the concert venue.
The shooting apparently halted when Paddock detected the security guard's approach at his hotel room door and turned to shoot the guard, Lombardo said.
The first police officers arrived about two minutes after that, the new account suggests. When they saw what had happened, they evacuated nearby rooms and waited for backup from a SWAT team to enter the room. That ended up happening 75 minutes after the first shots were fired.
Paddock was already dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Here is the timeline the sheriff's department released:
10:05 p.m.: First shots fired by the suspect. This was seen on closed-circuit television from the concert venue.
10:12 p.m.: First two officers arrive on the 31st floor and announce the gunfire is coming from directly above them.
10:15 p.m.: The last shots are fired from the suspect per body-worn cameras.
10:17 p.m.: The first two officers arrive on the 32nd floor.
10:18 p.m.: Security officer tells LVMPD officers he was shot and gives exact location of the suspect's room.
10:26-10:30 p.m.: Eight additional officers arrive on the 32nd floor and begin to move systematically down the hallway, clearing every room and looking for any injured people. They move this way because they no longer hear the gunfire of an active shooter.
10:55 p.m.: Eight officers arrive in the stairwell at the opposite end of the hallway nearest to the suspect's room.
11:20 p.m.: The first breach is set off and officers enter the room. They observe the suspect down on the ground and also see a second door that could not be accessed from their position.
11:27 p.m.: The second breach is set off, allowing officers to access the second room. Officers quickly realize there is no one else in the rooms and announce over the radio that the suspect is down.
Did I miss something or did they leave out the actual answer to why it took so long?
LVMPD knows the exact room at 10:18pm and the first breach is at 11:20pm. SWAT takes over an hour.
I think it is safe to assume SWAT was called within 5 minutes of the first 911 calls coming in. Within 10 minutes they should be on their way. Let's say it takes another 10 minutes to get to the hotel and then 10 minutes to get up to the room- that's 35 minutes and that's extremely conservative numbers right there.