Shortly before 10 p.m. PDT, hotel security guard Jesus Campos went to the 32nd floor in response to an open-door alert of a hotel guest’s room. Coincidentally, he heard sounds of drilling coming from Paddock's suite on the same floor and went to investigate. Paddock was drilling a hole beside the door. At 9:59 p.m., Paddock then began firing more than 200 rounds through the door. Campos was hit in the right thigh and immediately informed hotel security personnel that he had been shot. A maintenance worker was on the floor checking on a report about a fire door being jammed. While the shots were still being fired, an injured Campos encountered him and told him to take cover. The maintenance worker contacted hotel dispatchers over his radio, informed them of the on-going shooting, and told them to call the police. It is not known whether Campos’ presence affected Paddock’s plans.[21][22][5][23]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017_Las_Vegas_shooting
Who sent out that "open-door alert"? Why was Jesus the one sent to check it out? (Was he really employed by the hotel, and on their premises, that night?) And whose open door was Jesus (allegedly) checking up on? I'm going to take a wild guess that it was the room next door to Paddock's.
Stickdog, or anyone else, if you can find actual proof that JC was not in fact an employee of the Mandalay Hotel on the night of the massacre, that would be something of a bombshell. Because then JC would have had no good reason to be anywhere at all on those premises that night, no reason whatsoever to be at the very door of Stephen Paddock's 32nd-floor hotel room, and not the slightest reason for being there at least six minutes before any shooting had even taken place.