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ISIS is still claiming the Las Vegas shooting, and made a more specific claim about the gunman

Oct 6, 2017, 03:11 IST

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Atmosphere in the immediate aftermath of the mass shooting on the Las Vegas Strip (Las Vegas Boulevard) in Las Vegas, Nevada on Sunday, October 1st, 2017. In the attack that was carried out by lone gunman, Stephen Craig Paddock, 64, of Mesquite, Nevada, at least 58 people were killed and more than 500 people were injured in what is now the single largest mass shooting in United States History. From the 32nd floor of The Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino, Stephen Craig Paddock fired long range automatic weapons at the 23,000 concert-goers below as they attended the Route 91 Harvest Country Music Festival. After the rampage - that lasted approximately 15 minutes by most accounts - Paddock apparently took his own life via a self-inflicted gunshot as police swarmed his hotel room. (Las Vegas, Nevada, USA)GOTPAP/STAR MAX/IPx 2017 via AP

The Islamic State continues to take credit for last week's deadly mass shooting in Las Vegas, reportedlyoffering on Thursday a more specific claim that the gunman had converted to Islam before his rampage.

The militant group, also known as ISIS, claimed in its weekly newsletter that the shooter "converted to Islam six months ago," according to a translation from the SITE Intelligence Group. The claim is more specific than the group's initial assertion on Monday that the gunman had converted to Islam "several months ago."

As was the case on Monday, ISIS did not provide evidence for its claim, and authorities in the US have stated they have found no connections between the shooter, Stephen Paddock, and international terror groups.

Thursday's newsletter referred to the gunman as "Abu Abdul Barr al-Amriki" and included an image of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino, the hotel from which Paddock fired on 22,000 concertgoers below, drenched in blood.

Despite the Islamic State's absence of evidence to support its claim, New York Times correspondent Rukmini Callimachi‏ argued in a series of tweets it shouldn't necessarily be discounted outright.

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As Callimachi wrote, ISIS generally does not take credit for attacks it did not authorize or at least inspire. By that standard, she said she could only find three instances since 2014 in which the group falsely took credit for an incident.

"No proof is provided, but ISIS has rarely claimed attacks that were not by either their members or sympathizers," Callimachi said.

"Yes, the group frequently exaggerates death tolls & yes, they inflate & distort details, but the crux of the claim is typically correct."

NOW WATCH: Here's what it was like to live in a city controlled by ISIS

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