Stephen Paddock fired on a security guard before, not after, he committed mass murder, police said - a revision to the official police timeline that raises huge questions about the Las Vegas killings.
Previously, police said hero guard Jesus Campos had distracted Paddock from his rampage - being hit in the process - just a minute before police arrived.
Now it's been confirmed that Campos was shot six minutes before Paddock began firing on crowds, according to Daily Mail.
That raises questions about what the killer had been planning before Campos disturbed him, and why police did not arrive sooner.
Speaking on Monday, Las Vegas Sheriff Joseph Lombardo said that Jesus Campos had approached the room on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay hotel not because of gunfire, but because of a door alarm that had gone off nearby.
Paddock then apparently saw him on the video cameras he'd rigged up in the hall and opened fire on him. That occurred at 9:59pm.
He then turned his gun on the 22,000 revelers at the Route 91 Harvest country music festival five minutes later, per the original timeline of 10:05pm, Lombardo said.
That contradicts what had been said last Wednesday by Lombardo, who claimed that Campos had approached Paddock while he was firing at around 10:15pm.
Paddock turned his gun on Campos, before stopping firing altogether, he said.
Police arrived just minutes later to a silent hallway, Lombardo claimed - at which point they assumed Paddock was barricaded in and no longer a threat to revelers.
With the hall silent, they - and Campos, who was injured but wanted to help - were free to evacuate the rest of the rooms leading up to Paddock, he said.
That was used as an excuse by Lombardo to explain the delayed response - arguing that even if Campos had not been there, other officers would have disrupted the massacre themselves.
But in the new timeline that excuse no longer works; Campos lay wounded for six minutes before Paddock started firing, police now say.
And Paddock fired for ten minutes on the crowd before stopping abruptly - for reasons that now have police baffled.
Of course, that in turn leaves a 16-minute window in which Paddock was left undisturbed while hundreds were injured and dozens died.
Speaking on Monday, Lombardo seemed to want to shift some of the blame for the discrepancy onto Campos.
"As you might imagine, Mr Campos was not only injured when he was fired upon as he [checked on] the door alarm down the hall... he was also extremely shaken up about what had happened to him," Lombardo said.
"He was able to confirm to us exactly what he heard and saw in the moments before he was shot."
It's not clear which door Campos heard the alarm at, but on Wednesday Lombardo said that SWAT teams found that a stairwell exit door next to Paddock's room had been tampered with and sealed.
Lombardo also said that Campos heard Paddock drilling inside his room as he approached, possibly to install a camera or a gun.
That drill work was not finished, Lombardo said. When asked if he believed Paddock had stepped up the timeline and opened fire early because of the disruption, Lombardo declined to comment.