NJ Cops Oct18 | Page 39

2018 NJ State PBA Main Convention What Happened in Vegas Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department officers share wisdom learned from the mass shooting ■ BY AMBER RAMUNDO Yasenia Yatomi will never forget her 15th wedding anniver- sary. At first, the memorable aspect was the fact that after so many years of marriage, she and her husband had never really made a point of celebrating their annual milestones together. There was rarely an opportunity to do so, since both of their jobs with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) left them with little free time and few shared days off. So when Yatomi, then a K-9 commander, and her husband, a member of the SWAT team, managed to schedule a night off together, it was a big deal. The view from their hotel room at the Wynn Las Vegas was spectacular. The couple gazed out the window together, noting how beautiful the Las Vegas Strip looked from above. But the view changed when suddenly, the valley was illuminated by red and blue flashing lights. “It looked like a Christmas tree turned on,” Yatomi described. “Never before had I seen so many red and blue lights activate at the same time.” In that instant, Oct. 1, 2017 became a date that Yatomi would always remember for a different reason. It became the day that she and so many other LVMPD officers responded to the dead- liest mass shooting in American history at the nearby Mandalay Bay. “We did what any good married cop couple does and got dressed to head to the venue,” she stated. In front of the NJ State PBA audience gathered in Boca Ra- ton for the 2018 convention, Yatomi shared the chaotic details of the night that 58 people were killed at the Route 91 Harvest music festival. A compilation of video footage from bodycams, smartphones and surveillance put together by the FBI gave the officers in the room an idea of what it was like to be there as the bullets flew across the open-air venue and a crowd of 22,000 concertgoers scattered in hysteria. “It was like a bad scene from a Quentin Tarantino movie,” Yatomi detailed. “You saw stepped-on glasses, shoes that some- how fell off individuals’ feet. You saw how people got mowed down in the process of trying to help others.” Yatomi helped set up an incident command post a sixth of a mile from the active shooter, but it was a long time before any of the LVMPD could pinpoint exactly where the gunshots were coming from. During the course of an hour, 899 9-1-1 calls and 10,000 push-to-talks over the radio were made. Dozens of re- ports of shots fired, hostages, arson and explosions were made at hotels and casinos across the Strip. First responders were sent on a wild-goose chase to put each of the calls to rest, un- til the LVMPD climbed to the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay, where a single perpetrator took innocent lives from a high van- tage point. “I’ll be very honest, it took us a while to gain our bearings and Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Captain Yasenia Yatomi shares where she was the night of the Las Vegas shooting. put a decent command post in place where we could respond in a methodical manner to check each of those active shooter calls,” Yatomi admitted. “That took sending hard bodies down to the furthest end of the Strip, knocking on all of the doors and verifying (threats) because the calls kept coming in.” One of the many pieces of wisdom that resulted from the Las Vegas shooting was communication. Yatomi shared one of the important takeaways with PBA members, focusing on how dis- patchers are trained to respond to a high traffic volume of 9-1-1 calls during a critical incident. “Have a process in place for dispatchers to ask three ques- tions: Are you injured? Do you have any information about the suspect? Do you have eyes on the suspect?” Yatomi recom- mended. “If the answer is ‘no’, take their number and hang up the phone to free up those lines and continue the communica- tion throughout the organization.” At one point, a call came over the radio to report an explo- sion on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay. That explosion was the result of a makeshift team of five LVMPD officers and SWAT operators who made an explosive breach into the perpetrator’s room, where he was found dead. Finally, the gunshots stopped, and the LVMPD was tasked with aiding a city struck by disaster. Meanwhile, investigators went to work to find out how and why this mass shooting took place. LVMPD Director Annette Mullen took over the presentation to share details of the investigation with PBA members. After 1,965 investigative leads, 20,560 hours of video footage, 251,000 images and 746 legal notices, the FBI was able to find out a lot about the perpetrator, Stephen Paddock. CONTINUED ON PAGE 40 www.njcopsmagazine.com ■ OCTOBER 2018 39