ORLANDO, Fla. — It had been an evening of drinking, dancing and drag shows. After hours of revelry, the partygoers crowding the gay nightclub known as the Pulse took their last sips before the place closed.
That’s when authorities said Omar Mateen emerged, carrying an AR-15 and spraying the helpless crowd with bullets.
Witnesses said he fired relentlessly — 20 rounds, 40, then 50 and more.
In such tight quarters, the bullets could hardly miss. He shot at police.
He took hostages.
When the gunfire stopped, 50 people were dead and dozens critically wounded in the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
Mateen, who authorities said had pledged allegiance to Islamic State in a 911 call shortly before the attack, died in a battle with SWAT team members.
Authorities began investigating whether the assault was an act of terrorism and probing the background of Mateen, a 29-year-old American citizen from Fort Pierce, Florida, who had worked as a security guard.
At least 53 people were hospitalized, most in critical condition, officials said.
A surgeon at Orlando Regional Medical Center said the death toll likely would climb.
“There’s blood everywhere,” Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer said.
The gunman’s father recalled his son recently got angry when he saw two men kissing in Miami and said that might be related to the assault.
Mateen’s ex-wife said his family was from Afghanistan, but her ex-husband was born in New York.
His family later moved to Florida.
A law-enforcement official said the gunman made a 911 call from the club in which he professed allegiance to the leader of the Islamic State, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
The official was familiar with the investigation but was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
The shooter in 2013 made inflammatory comments to co-workers, and Mateen was interviewed twice, FBI agent Ronald Hopper said. He called those interviews inconclusive.
In 2014, Hopper said, officials found Mateen had ties to an American suicide bomber. He described the contact as minimal, saying it did not constitute a threat at the time.
Mateen bought at least two firearms legally within the last week or so, according to Trevor Velinor of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
The previous deadliest mass shooting in the U.S. was the 2007 attack at Virginia Tech, where a student killed 32 people before killing himself.
The Orlando suspect exchanged gunfire with 14 police officers at the club, which had more than 300 people inside.
The gunfire started about 2 a.m.
“He had an automatic rifle, so nobody stood a chance,” said Jackie Smith, who had two friends next to her get shot. “I just tried to get out of there.”
At one point, the gunman took hostages. About 5 a.m., authorities sent in a SWAT team to rescue them, police chief John Mina said.
Pulse initially posted on its own Facebook page: “Everyone get out of Pulse and keep running.”
Just before 6 a.m., the club posted an update: “As soon as we have any information, we will update everyone. Please keep everyone in your prayers as we work through this tragic event. Thank you for your thoughts and love.”
In addition to the assault rifle, the shooter also had some sort of “suspicious device,” the police chief said.
Thirty-nine of the dead were killed at the club, and 11 people died at hospitals, the mayor said.
At first, officers mistakenly thought the gunman had strapped explosives to the dead and the club was booby-trapped. A bomb robot sent back images of a battery part next to a body, Dyer said.
That prevented paramedics from going in until authorities determined the battery fell out of an exit sign or a smoke detector.
The robot was sent in after SWAT team members put explosive charges on a wall and an armored vehicle knocked the wall down in an effort to rescue hostages.
In the aftermath of the attack, police departments across the country stepped up patrols in neighborhoods frequented by the LGBT community.
Authorities were looking into whether the shooter acted alone, according to Danny Banks, an agent with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.
“This is an incident, as I see it, that we certainly classify as domestic terror incident,” Orange County Sheriff Jerry Demings said.
Mateen’s father, Mir Seddique, told NBC News about his son seeing the men kissing a couple of months ago.
“We are saying we are apologizing for the whole incident,” Seddique said. “We are in shock like the whole country.”
When asked whether the gunman had a connection to radical Islamic terrorism, Hopper said authorities had “suggestions that individual has leanings towards that.”
Mateen’s father said the attack had nothing to do with religion, he said.
The gunman was a security guard with a company called G4S. In a 2012 newsletter, the firm identified him as working in West Palm Beach.
In a statement sent Sunday to the Palm Beach Post, the company confirmed he had been an employee since September 2007. State records show Mateen had held a firearms license since at least 2011.
President Barack Obama called the shooting an “act of terror” and an “act of hate” targeting a place of “solidarity and empowerment” for gays and lesbians. He urged Americans to decide whether this is the kind of “country we want to be.”
Authorities said they had secured a van owned by the suspect outside the club. Meanwhile, a SWAT truck and a bomb-disposal unit were on the scene of an address associated with Mateen in Fort Pierce, about 118 miles southeast of Orlando.
Relatives and friends, many in tears, gathered outside the hospital to learn the fate of loved ones.
Smith did not know the conditions of her wounded friends. She came out of the hospital and burst into tears.
Christine Leinonen drove to Orlando at 4 a.m. after learning of the shooting from a friend of her 32-year-old son, Christopher Leinonen, who was at Pulse and is missing.
She had not heard from her son and feared the worst.
“These are nonsensical killings of our children,” she said, sobbing. “They’re killing our babies!”
She said her son’s friend Brandon Wolf survived by hiding in a bathroom and running out as the bullets flew.
A woman who was outside the club early Sunday was trying to contact her 30-year-old son, Eddie, who texted her when the shooting happened and asked her to call police. He told her he ran into a bathroom with other club patrons to hide. He then texted her: “He’s coming.”
“The next text said: ‘He has us, and he’s in here with us,’” Mina Justice said. “That was the last conversation.”
A bartender said she initially thought the gunshots were music. But after a second shot, there was a pause, followed by more shots. That’s when Tiffany Johnson realized something was wrong.
Johnson said people dropped to the ground and started running out of the club. She ran to a fast-food restaurant across the street and met one of her customers, who let her get in his car. They drove away.
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