Multimillionaire mass murderer Stephen Paddock was eerily quiet when visiting a Texas gun store last year, the owner has revealed.
Paul Peddle, owner of B&S guns in Garland, Texas, said that Paddock had entered his store several times – but that on his most recent visit, in 2016, he was unusually quiet.
‘He was like a ghost when he came in the shop,’ Peddle told WFAA. ‘Very quiet. Snuck in, snuck out. Asked a few questions, talked to the gunsmiths, had a little repair done and he was gone.’
That stands in stark contrast to the ‘happy and upbeat’ mood he displayed at a Nevada store – just one week before he murdered 58 people and injured hundreds more.
Paul Peddle (left) said Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock (right) had bought guns at his Texas store several times, but that during his last visit, in 2016, he was ‘like a ghost’
Peddle said that he knew Paddock from previous visits, including purchases of handguns in 2010 and 2011.
One of the handguns Paddock bought was a $1,500 model usually used by the Secret Service, he said; such expensive buys were not uncommon for Paddock.
Peddle said Paddock quietly entered B&S Guns (pictured), got his guns repaired and left. But he didn’t raise any red flags, Peddle said
And while Paddock was quiet, Peddle said, he hadn’t seen any ‘red flags.’
‘I’m not saying we could have caught it but we know what to look for, we’ve been in business for 30 years,’ he said. ‘There’s certain things you ask for that we kind of go, “Uhh, that’s not right.”‘
The attitude displayed by Paddock a year ago in Texas stands in striking contrast to the one he displayed at another store in Nevada just a week before the killings.
‘It was a normal day,’ Christopher Sullivan, who works at Guns & Guitars in Paddock’s home town of Mesquite, told The Spectrum of Paddock’s September 28 visit.
‘He came in and filled out his paperwork, went across the street, did some shopping at Walmart, came back, shook my hand, said “Have a great day” and out the door he went.
‘He never would’ve given an inclination about what was going on in his mind,’ Sullivan said.
‘It’s something I’ve run through my head a million times trying to figure out if I’ve missed something.’
Chris Sullivan, the manager of Guns & Guitars in Nevada, said that by contrast Paddock was ‘happy and upbeat’ when he bought a rifle just four days before his Las Vegas killing spree
Paddock paid $600 for a Ruger American .308 bolt-action rifle (pictured) from Guns & Guitars, which is based in his home town of Mesquite. Sullivan said Paddock was usually very friendly
According to The Sun, Paddock bought a $600 bolt-action Ruger American .308 rifle.
Sullivan said that the gun Paddock bought that day wasn’t found in the hotel room where he fired on 22,000 revelers Sunday, killing 59 and injuring more than 400.
But he said he’d cleaned ‘pretty much every gun’ Paddock owned – including some of those found around his body by a SWAT team after they breached his sniper’s nest.
Stephen Paddock killed at least 59 people and injured 489 others firing on a music festival. Sullivan said he’s replayed the visit in his mind, trying to spot ways he could have predicted the massacre
Sullivan said he’d been physically ill after learning of the murders, and cried for half an hour on Tuesday night as he replayed his interactions with Paddock in his head, wondering if there was something he missed.
‘He was upbeat, happy, normal guy – shake hands, have a good day. It just wasn’t there, man,’ Sullivan said. ‘At some point, he snapped. What made him snap? I don’t know.’
Speaking to CBS, Sullivan was adamant that he never sold Paddock ammunition or the so-called ‘bump stocks’ that can modify a semi-automatic gun and make it fully automatic.
Investigators say that of the 23 weapons found in Paddock’s hotel room, 12 of them had bump stocks added.
Bump stocks are completely legal, but so far no gun shop that sold to Paddock has taken responsibility for selling them to the shooter.
Sullivan’s co-worker, who goes by the name of Skipper Speece, said it took around 20 minutes for the store to carry out vetting procedures and Paddock passed with flying colors – raising no alarm bells.
He then left the shop with the weapon, but it’s unclear what happened next.
Did he decide against taking the rifle to Vegas and left it at home or did he take it and leave it in his car?
‘Skipper’ Speece, a co-worker of Sullivan’s at Guns & Guitars stands guard outside the store, as the owner has been on the receiving end of death threats since the Las Vegas massacre
Skipper, a gunsmith, sold Paddock the gun, and like Sullivan said that he hadn’t spotted anything amiss in Paddock’s interactions at the store
Either way the gun was not included as part of Paddock’s arsenal of death.
Skipper said Paddock was a regular visitor to the store and he had served him four times in total.
The gunsmith was a bodyguard for Nevada cattle rancher Cliven Bundy, and was involved in the infamous 2014 Bunkerville ranch standoff.
The standoff involved an armed confrontation between supporters of Bundy and law enforcement following a 21-year legal dispute over grazing rights.
He says Paddock bought just one of the guns that was found in his hotel suite from Guns & Guitars – a Sig Sauer 716.
Skipper (right) is Nevada cattle rancher Cliven Bundy’s (left) former personal bodyguard and was involved with the infamous 2014 Bunkerville ranch standoff
The Swiss/German made rifle fires large-caliber 7.62mm rounds, and is a highly accurate weapon from the AR10 range of guns. These weapons usually sell for around $3,500.
But a week before the attack he dropped into the store just two miles from his home in a retirement community and ‘admired’ the Ruger rifle he would later also buy.
Skipper said: ‘He came in a week earlier and says, “Hey, do you remember me, I’m Steve Paddock,” and I said, “I’ve got some money for you,” because we sold one of his guns.
‘So I go to the safe and pull out the envelope and he’s looking around and says “Hey, what’s that rifle there,” and points out the Ruger.’
A photo leaked Tuesday showed Paddock’s body after he committed suicide in the hotel room he’d fired on civilians from. There also appears to be a letter on the table (in red circle), although on Thursday police said no suicide note was found
Paddock fired on 22,000 people at a nearby music festival with 23 guns. Magazines can be seen stacked on the right
Paddock bought just one of the guns that was found in his hotel suite from Guns & Guitars – a Sig Sauer 716
‘He says he’s not going to buy it, ‘I’ll think about it’, so I give him the money and he goes.’
‘Then a week later, on the 28th, he came in again and bought it for $600. He never said what he was going to use it for.
‘He was a normal guy, a typical customer, there was never any red flags, nothing to raise concern. If he had acted unusually or suspiciously in the store I wouldn’t have sold him the rifle.
The worker said Paddock’s girlfriend, Marilou Danley, who police named a person of interest in the case, also came in to the shop once, but nothing seemed amiss
‘He didn’t say anything about why he wanted to buy the rifle. We actually had one of his rifles on consignment hanging on the wall.
‘He would buy something and bring it back. He brought a handgun to us before. We would buy back from him.
‘He passed all the vetting procedures, he has no criminal record, no one can understand why this happened.’
Skipper, who said Paddock had bought three other guns from the shop in the past, none of which were used in the shooting, says Mesquite is awash with gun enthusiasts like Paddock.
‘It’s a small town but there’s a lot of retired cops, former military guys, ex-government spooks. They’re all carrying.’
The worker said he was drinking in a bar on Sunday night when he watched the horror unfold on TV.
At 2am he received a call from a friend in the FBI who wanted to run a name by him.
When he heard Stephen Paddock, Skipper was shocked.
‘As soon as he said the name I knew who he was, because I had only served him a few days earlier,’ he recalled.
A horrifying video has emerged, showing dozens of lifeless bodies scattering the Las Vegas field where Stephen Paddock killed 58 on Sunday
‘I know he liked country music so then I’m thinking he must have been after someone he knows, that was my first thought.
‘I couldn’t believe it and after I get the call from a friend at the FBI I rushed straight to the store to check our records.
‘The FBI wanted to know any addresses listed and the serial numbers of any weapons he had purchased.
‘Anyway I start opening up the ATF books and they give me four or five serial numbers and I find they aren’t from us, so he didn’t buy them all from us.
‘So they say, “I’m gonna read you some serial numbers” and there’s one match and it was a Sig rifle. That was the only one that he bought from us that he used.
‘I called my boss Chris Sullivan and he came to the store as well, we were both really shocked that one of our customers was involved.’
Skipper said it was only later they learned that the Ruger rifle – which had rail slots for a scope – Paddock had bought wasn’t in the hotel room, but one of the guns they had sold him months earlier was.
‘The guy was just a regular gun enthusiast, there was nothing special about him,’ Skipper said.
‘He’s not religious, he never talked about religion, he never talked about politics.’
The worker said Paddock’s girlfriend, Marilou Danley, who police named a person of interest in the case, also came in to the shop once.
‘The only time we saw Marilou, Stephen was in the store looking around, talking to Chris and I guess she was in the car and she opens the door and says, “Are you done?”
‘And he says, “Yeah, I’ll just be a second,” that was the only time we saw her. He was totally pleasant to her, just said “I’ll be a second, no problem.”‘
Skipper said Paddock would have had no problem getting the 23 guns inside his minivan and smuggling them up to the 32nd floor room where he was staying.
Paddock left the shop after buying the mystery weapon but it’s unclear whether he left the rifle at home (pictured) or in his car
‘He was a smart guy. He’s not going to be caught going into the hotel with the weapons,’ Skipper said.
‘The Vegas casinos have firearms safes so if you are traveling and have a handgun, they’ll tell you, “We’ll lock it in the safe,” because they don’t want guns in the lobby.
But they’re not going to put you through a metal detector.’
Guns and Guitars staff have been inundated with death threats by phone and email, and Sullivan has reported them to the police.
‘We’re taking screen shots and forwarding emails to the FBI and to Las Vegas Metro,’ said Skipper.
The store opened its doors on Wednesday for the first time since the tragedy and brought in extra security to man the entrance.
As a temporary precaution, it also introduced a new policy banning loaded firearms from being brought inside.