Hello Australia!! - Inside the gunman's hotel suite, before and after the Las Vegas Massacre - There's an Australian connection to the woman who could shed a lot of light on why a millionaire turned into a mass murderer - Trump takes a gaffe-filled trip to Puerto Rico - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock wired US$100,000 to an account in the Philippines before unleashing a prolonged and vicious assault from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino at a country music festival.  59 people were killed and more than 570 are recovering from various injuries.  It's not clear who owns that account, but the Philippines is the home country of the woman believed to be the gunman's partner, Marilou Danley, a former Brisbane resident who travels on an Australian passport. 
Marilou Danley's passport
Marilou Danley
The 62-year old Ms. Danley was last believed to be in the Philippines (apparently not in Tokyo as earlier reported) and expected to arrive in the US on Wednesday, local time.  In a Tuesday news conference, investigators referred to her as a "person of interest" rather than someone merely tangentially related to the case.

The purpose of the transfer is not clear, but it could have just been in line with the way the millionaire mass murderer lived prior to Sunday night's carnage.  The Las Vegas casinos considered him to be a high roller, and he would drop tens of thousands of dollars at a time during visits.  "Condemn Steve for gambling.  Steve took care of the people he loved," said younger brother Eric Paddock in a second day of weird interviews outside his Florida home, "He helped make me and my family wealthy." 
Stephen Paddock
And then there was the thousands of dollars Stephen Paddock spent on weapons - 43 rifles and guns, top of the line stuff, modified with apparently-legal parts called "bump stocks" that retrofit into a semi-automatic weapon to make them fully automatic.  Which he would then use to slaughter lower-middle class country music fans.

Las Vegas Sheriff Joseph Lombardo said he will investigate the leak of images and video from inside the Mandalay Bay Hotel suite from which Paddock fired at the concert.  The video shows the damage to the wall outside the suite and a glimpse of one of the machine guns on its stand near the window.  Here's a video link.  And at the end of this one.  The still images, obtained by Boston 25 News journalist Jacqui Henrich "clearly show the gun on the floor of the Mandalay Bay hotel room, and also shows numerous rounds of ammunition". 
Boston 25 News
The weapons pictured have huge magazines, one has a sniper's bipod and optics, and they lay among a bunch of shells.  In the upper corner is a small sledge hammer apparently used to bust out the windows facing the outdoor concert venue below.  Separately, some guy who stayed in the room a couple of years ago released video of his earlier visit, so if you want to see the inside of a suite before anything happened then here it is.

Anyway..

Donald Trump visited hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico for some photo ops with a carefully chosen handful of suck-ups.  But because he's the orange clown, Trump insulted the American citizens of Puerto Rico by blaming them for for back-to-back hurricanes:  "I hate to tell you Puerto Rico, but you are throwing our budget out of whack," he said, "We spent a lot of money on Puerto Rico and that's fine.  We saved a lot of lives," telling people to be "proud" of the death toll of 16 lives lost.  Trump then belittled the disaster that knocked out all power and communication, destroyed most of the homes, and wiped out most agriculture.  Later, he visited a church and hurled paper towel rolls into a crowd, as if he were shooting t-shirts from a cannon in a sports arena.  Couldn't have been worse if he had said, "Hey Puerto Ricans, you want to get clean?  Want some dignity?  Gotta jump for it!  Gotta jump for it!"

Cuba is blasting the US for expelling 15 Cuban diplomats, under the pretext that Havana failed to protect US Embassy workers from some sort of "sonic blast" that the US isn't even capable of identifying.  The US State Department claims that nearly two dozen US personnel have suffered unexplained ill health in the city.  No names of these patients nor medical records have been offered to substantiate the claim.  Trump and right-wing Republicans criticized then-President Barack Obama for reopening US-Cuban relations after more than five decades of pointless Cold War.

Much of Catalonia was locked down in a general strike because of widespread public disgust over Spain's violent crackdown on a non-binding independence referendum, which Catalan officials say passed with a near unanimous vote.  The streets were packed with 700,000 protesters, angry mobs chased national cops from local hotels calling them "occupiers", schools and university classrooms were empty.  King Felipe of Spain went on TV to address the situation, but failed to mention the savage beatings that Spanish cops delivered on the people, instead accusing Catalan authorities of attempting to break "the unity of Spain".