The Arizona Republic

Killer’s girlfriend says he gave no hint of plan

She says after he paid for her trip to the Philippine­s and wired her $100,000, she feared it was his way of breaking up

- John Bacon and Kevin Johnson USA TODAY

The girlfriend of the man behind the Las Vegas bloodbath that killed nearly 60 innocent people said Wednesday that the man she knew was a kind person that gave no hint of his oncoming murderous rampage.

“I knew Stephen Paddock as a kind, quiet caring man,” Marilou Danley in a statement through her attorney after an FBI interview. “I loved him and I hoped for a quiet future together with him. He never said anything to me or took any action that I was aware of, that I understood in anyway to be warning that something horrible like this was going to happen.”

Danley, who described herself as a mother and a grandmothe­r, returned to the U.S. on Wednesday after visiting family members in the Philippine­s, their native country. She was in the Philippine­s when Paddock fired the fatal gunshots out of a 32nd-story window of a Las Vegas high rise on Sunday.

Danley, 62, said in the statement that a couple of weeks ago, Paddock told her he had found an inexpensiv­e plane ticket for her to go visit her family. Once she was there, she said, he had wired her money to buy a home for her and her family. The FBI says he wired $100,000.

She said that the plane ticket and money for the home made her concerned that Paddock was pushing her away.

“I was grateful, but honestly, I was worried that first the unexpected trip and then the money was a way of breaking up with me,” Danley said. “It never occurred to me in any way whatsoever that he was planning violence against anyone.”

“I have not made a statement until now because I have been cooperatin­g with authoritie­s. I voluntaril­y flew back to America, because I know the FBI and the Las Vegas Police Department wanted to talk to me, and I want to talk to them. I will cooperate fully with their investigat­ion. Anything I can do to help ease suffering and help in any way I will do.”

Danley was interviewe­d Wednesday by authoritie­s at the FBI’s Los Angeles field office, a law enforcemen­t official said. The official, who was not authorized to comment publicly, said Danley was accompanie­d by a lawyer and cooperated with the investigat­ion.

Las Vegas Sheriff Joseph Lombardo has named Danley a “person of interest” in the investigat­ion. The official said Danley was not considered an accomplice, though investigat­ors were likely to subject her to extensive questionin­g about the gunman’s activities before the assault, his extensive cache of weapons and the state of his finances.

FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe said investigat­ors worked to reconstruc­t Paddock’s life and patterns. McCabe said investigat­ors wanted to speak to “anyone and everyone who may have crossed his path in the days and the weeks leading up to this horrific event.”

Paddock wounded more than 500 people in a 10-minute barrage from his perch in a 32ndfloor hotel suite on the city’s Strip. The retired accountant killed himself before a SWAT team blasted into the room.

The Australian Associated Press reported Danley was born in the Philippine­s and moved to Queensland in eastern Australia in the early 1980s. She left Australia for the USA in 1989, where she worked in casinos.

Her two sisters, who live in Australia, told the country’s Channel 7 TV network there was no way Danley knew what Paddock planned. Their identities were concealed.

“I loved him and I hoped for a quiet future together with him.”

Contributi­ng: Aamer Madhani, Mike James and Jane Onyanga-Omara; Sarah Litz, Reno Gazette-Journal; Wendy Leung, Ventura County Star; and Brett Kelman, Rosalie Murphy and Corinne S. Kennedy, The Desert Sun

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