mind, trace, is the hundred thousand dollars that was sent to her allegedly to buy her new house. i am not buying that just yet. someone has to prove that to me because i have always found out, follow the money, and you will find out what the real problem is. as you can recall, that part of the world, the philippines, manila, is well aware of the way that radical extremists operate and they have been there for a long time. i still have that question in my mind. it hasn t gone away yet. trace: as do a lot of others, bill, people saying, with the money center for nefarious deeds? the question becomes, was it a fact where he said, i m not going to be able to get anybody out, once i commit this crime, my assets, everything i owned will be shut down may be forever. she maybe gets it away to the philippines but you are right, there is the other side saying, and i don t buy the whole hundred thousand for a brand-new house.
i totally agree with you, trace. it will all unfold, but i am sure that the strategy right now is to do strategic interviews of her and maybe some other people in this case because there is somebody that law enforcement has that knows a lot of information that is supplying at its vital information about us why are they are taking it slowly and factually. trace: former assistant director to the fbi in new york, bill gavin. good to see you come a great insight. thank you, sir. trace, thank you so much. one quick thing, thank you for the way you have been reporting. you haven t stretched the imagination, you have been with the facts, and real credit to fox and the news industry in general. excellent job. trace: you are a very kind man. thank you, bill. i appreciate that. as las vegas fights to regain some sense of normalcy, a return to routine, larger questions begin to surface. why did stephen paddock choose to unlink a massacre on innocent
assess that, how do you know someone who is badly injured but acts like they are fine because their bodies in shock? luckily, a lot of people has said it, they were people that were on injured that were able to tell us what some of the injuries were. with experience, you learn how to look at somebody and judgment from there. the initial assessment is what gets them into the ambulance and then the paramedics and emts did further assessments and treatments. we went at what point do you say, we have a call, all hands on deck, we got a call for everybody? we need help, all the help we can get. i think the realization came early on. like i said, the amount of people we were surrounded by and trying to help, the decision was made early on to get as many people as possible. at one point, we paged out to all of the off-duty crews that if they could respond, please, come to the station. in a matter of less than a half hour, we had over 160
this, and there have been a lot of people on both sides saying different things about gun control. i want to play for you if i can the beit martha maccallum talked to congressman steve scalise, on his recovery from the gun battle, i want to play this for you and we will read you a quote from a band member who was playing at the concert here on sunday night. they don t have it. but what he saying is we ll play steve scalise in a minute. what he is saying is, he was actually reinforced, it reinforced his belief in that we don t need more gun laws. your stance is? i think if you can show me a law that would prevent evil men from slaughtering innocent people, i would support it in a second. i think we all would. i think it is a little early, trace, to talk about policy and what comes out of the situation. we will have plenty of debates and opportunities. i can tell you this, there were some of those victims who i talked to in the hospital rooms,
as we arrived, they were people everywhere. people were running up to us, letting us know they had been shot. we started assessing people as quickly as possible, ambulances were still arriving, we were able to place people into specific ambulances, sometimes three to four patients at a time. trace: you said there were people getting into a truck and you had this rolling triage. talk about that. one of the first interactions we had was a pickup truck that came to our location and the entire truck bed was filled with people that had been shot. initially, i was acting as a paramedic, hopped in the back of the pickup truck, started assessing people as quickly as possible, started unloading the patient some at that point, we had several ambulances, getting each patient into an ambulance, like i said, sometimes three or four at a time. after that, i had to move into more of a coordination role as a situation grew. trace: my guess is a lot of the people in the back of the truck bed, a