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Ammo seller to Las Vegas killer arrested on federal charge

Posted at 11:24 AM, Feb 03, 2018
and last updated 2018-02-03 11:25:14-05

Douglas Haig, an Arizona man who says he sold tracer ammunition to the gunman in October’s Las Vegas massacre, was arrested Friday on a charge of manufacturing and selling armor-piercing bullets in violation of federal law.

A criminal complaint alleges two unfired .308-caliber rounds found in gunman Stephen Paddock’s hotel room had Haig’s fingerprints on them as well as tool marks from his workshop. The bullets in the cartridges were classified as armor-piercing, the complaint says.

The FBI on October 19 searched Haig’s Mesa home and seized ammunition the agency says is classified as armor-piercing, the complaint said. Haig did not have a license to manufacture armor-piercing ammunition, documents said.

Police say Paddock opened fire on October 1 from his room at Las Vegas’ Mandalay Bay hotel onto a crowd attending a music festival, killing 58 people and shooting and injuring 422 others. More than 850 others suffered other injuries in the attack.

Haig, 55, appeared in court Friday and was released on this own recognizance with specific conditions not spelled out in court proceedings. He is due in court again February 15 for a preliminary hearing.

The maximum penalty for manufacturing illegal ammunition is five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Haig’s attorney, Marc J. Victor, told CNN he had no comment. CNN affiliate KNXV caught up with Victor outside court, and the lawyer said he couldn’t say anything because of the ongoing case.

“My first obligation and only obligation is to my client,” he told KNXV.

Haig named as person of interest in documents

Haig was publicly linked to the Las Vegas investigation on Tuesday when a judge unsealed months-old police search warrant records that named him as a person of interest.

In a Friday morning news conference before his arrest, Haig, responding to the documents’ release, said he sold tracer ammunition to Paddock. Tracer ammunition produces a flame that lets a shooter follow a bullet’s path for precise aim.

He did not describe the ammunition as armor-piercing. Victor, at the same news conference at his Phoenix-area office, said the ammunition that Haig sold Paddock “was not modified in any way … from manufacturer’s specs.”

Haig said he had no other dealings with Paddock and never saw anything suspicious in their brief interactions.

Haig also said at the news conference that he received death threats after his name was revealed this week.

He stressed that his sale made “no contribution” to the killings since Paddock didn’t appear to have fired tracer rounds.

“I hope today ends (the death threats), when people realize that I wasn’t in collusion with Paddock — that I was not in any way, shape or form associated with the horrible crime that he committed,” Haig said.

Investigators recovered tracer rounds from Paddock’s room, two law enforcement sources told CNN in October.

But there was no evidence the tracer rounds were used during the attack, according to the sources, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about such details.

Authorities have repeatedly said Paddock, who investigators say died of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound, was the only shooter.

Seller’s reaction to massacre: ‘Revulsion’

Haig, an aerospace engineer and part-time ammunition reseller, said he sold 720 rounds of surplus US military tracer ammunition to Paddock at his Mesa home in September after Paddock approached him at a Phoenix gun show.

The ammunition, he said, was:

• 600 rounds of 7.62mm NATO, M62, tracer ammunition, manufactured by the Lake City Army Ammunition Plant in Independence, Missouri.

• 120 rounds of 5.56mm M196 tracer ammunition, manufactured by the same plant.

He said the 5.56mm rounds were in their original packaging. He did not comment on the 7.62mm rounds’ packaging.

Before the sale, Paddock told him “that he was going to go out to the desert and put on a light show” with the ammunition — that he was “going to go out and shoot it at night with friends.”

Paddock arrived at Haig’s home “very well-dressed, very well-groomed, very polite, very respectful,” Haig said.

“At no time did I see anything suspicious or odd or any kind of a tell, anything that would set off an alarm,” he said.

Victor said police found his client’s name and address on a box that Paddock had — a box that Haig gave him to carry the tracer rounds he had bought.

Haig said he learned of the massacre when authorities contacted him at work the next morning.

“Revulsion,” Haig said of his reaction. “Sickness. Horror that this man would do something like that.”

Haig spoke with investigators four times after the shooting, and has been “fully cooperative,” Victor said.

“This was a routine transaction to purchase a routine type of ammunition that is available in many different retail outlets throughout the state of Arizona,” Victor said. “After that transaction, Doug had absolutely no further contact with Mr. Paddock.”

Timeline of the sale

A Nevada judge on Tuesday unsealed police search warrant records — prepared shortly after the shooting — that mentioned two persons of interest in the case. The judge released the documents after CNN and other media outlets sued to obtain them.

One person of interest, whom police had named previously, was the killer’s girlfriend, Marilou Danley. Authorities subsequently cleared her publicly.

The second name was redacted. But the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported it had a version of the search warrant that named, without redaction, Haig as that second person. The documents didn’t explain why he was a person of interest.

Las Vegas police officials told CNN the department couldn’t comment on Haig or any names, and referred questions to federal authorities.

Haig held Friday’s news conference to protect his reputation, he and his attorney said. They gave the following timeline:

• Paddock first approached Haig’s table at a Las Vegas gun show sometime last year but met another person who was behind the table.

• Haig first met Paddock at a subsequent Phoenix gun show, where he was selling ammunition.

• Paddock took Haig’s business card because the seller didn’t have the quantity of trace ammunition that he wanted.

• Paddock later called Haig three times to arrange a sale at Haig’s home.

• In September, Paddock arrived at Haig’s home, bought the tracer ammunition and drove away.

Death threats

Haig said he’s received death threats since the search warrant documents were released Tuesday.

“One woman (was) screaming through my door that I should be killed and I should die,” he told reporters at Friday’s news conference. “It’s been not a lot of fun, quite frankly.”

Haig added, “I had no contribution to what Paddock did. I had no way to see into his mind.”

Sheriff has said feds are investigating someone

When the search warrant documents were released this week, Clark County District Court Judge Elissa Cadish allowed a small portion of those records to be redacted because “there is an ongoing investigation regarding charges against another individual, arising out of information obtained in connection with the … shooting, but not directly related to the shooting.”

In response to a question from CNN in January, the Clark County sheriff, Joe Lombardo, said federal authorities are investigating a person in the case. That person could face federal charges not directly related to the shooting within the next 60 days, the sheriff said January 19.

Lombardo didn’t disclose the person’s name, saying those details were “under federal grand jury disclosure” rules.

On Friday morning, before his arrest, Haig answered a reporter’s question about whether he believed he was that person.

“No. I don’t think it’s me at all,” Haig said.