LAS VEGAS -- The packed sidewalks on the Las Vegas Strip became a scene of horror as a woman deliberately plowed her car into groups of partiers and tourists, killing one person and injuring dozens of others, authorities said.
The woman in her 20s, who has not been identified, struck pedestrians as she drove onto the walkway in front of the Paris and Planet Hollywood casino-hotels on Sunday evening, police said.
Lt. Dan McGrath said investigators believe the woman driving a 1996 Oldsmobile intentionally "went up and off these streets, two or possibly three times." A 3-year-old child was in the car with her but was not hurt, police said.
The driver sped away before the vehicle was found at a hotel and she was taken into custody, police said.
Authorities did not give a possible motive for the crash on a busy stretch of Las Vegas Boulevard across from the dancing water fountains of the Bellagio hotel-casino where visitors crowd sidewalks as they head from one casino to another. The Miss Universe pageant was being held nearby at Planet Hollywood at the time.
The woman was having her blood drawn and is being held in jail with charges pending. She had recently moved to the area; the car she was driving was registered in Oregon, authorities said.
"This is a huge tragedy that has happened on our Strip," Lt. Peter Boffelli said.
The injured were taken to three hospitals, including the adult who died. University Medical Center was treating three people in critical condition and two others in serious condition. Some were from Montreal and needed a French translator.
Justin Cochrane, a visitor from Santa Barbara, California, said he was having dinner at a sidewalk restaurant outside the Paris hotel when he saw the car smashing into pedestrians.
"It was just massacring people," he said, adding that the car appeared to be going 30 to 40 mph.
The Oldsmobile then went farther down the road and drove back into another crowd of pedestrians on the sidewalk, he said.
Cochrane said he couldn't understand why the car went into the crowd a second time.
"Why would it slow to go around and then accelerate again?" he said. "I thought, 'It's a crazy person.'"
Cochrane said he saw children and adults injured on the ground as the car drove away.
Police were reviewing video from casino surveillance cameras to get details of what occurred. The pedestrians were not in the road and were not at fault, police said.
Joel Ortega, 31, of Redlands, California, said he and his wife, Carla, were visiting for the weekend and found themselves blocked from walking on the sidewalk toward the Paris hotel. They could see police investigating about a block away from the crash.
"At first, I thought it was a movie shoot," he said. "I thought maybe we'd see someone famous."
But then they learned that it was a crash scene. Ortega said it made them remember how their Redlands neighborhood was disrupted after the Dec. 2 mass shooting in nearby San Bernardino, California.
The crash comes months after another woman was accused of driving into a crowd during Oklahoma State's homecoming parade. Four people were killed and more than 40 were hurt Oct. 24.
In September 2005, three tourists were killed and nearly a dozen injured when a car barreled through the crowd on the Las Vegas Strip and crashed into a cement barrier in front of Bally's hotel-casino.