I call BS on this report. The article accompanying the video said the guy in shorts with the bag was carrying between $2.5 and $3.0 million in casino chips. Its unlikely a raid to seize video files would have such chips accompanying them. This may have simply been standard security for guarding movement of high value casino chips.
Chip transfer requires an FBI guy and the pointing of carbines at money-spending patrons..?
As a boy I worked in a casino and I’ve never seen that.
If that's the case, then why is the guy at the front of the group pointing his gun at casino patrons, who all had their "hands up, don't shoot" poses going?
That certainly doesn't seem like proper procedure. It's practically a criminal act...
See post 14. This guy in shorts looks like the head of security I met with.
When they move chips through the casino, is it “standard security” to point firearms at the patrons and make them raise their arms and hands?
Why haven’t any of these people come forward?
A casino chip movement where they point guns at people holding their hands up? Id find somewhere else to lose my money.
and guys wearing shorts don't carry anything of value for a casino not to mention that is done out of sight from players
If you listen to the video theyre shouting, hands up!
All the patrons were held at gunpoint. All sensitive/secure operations in casinos and resorts happen outside the publics purview. Tunnels and back rooms abound for such purposes. Nothing typical about this...
And they just happened to be moving them at precisely the time Stephen Paddock was mowing people down right up the street?