A disturbed Las Vegas man fatally shot himself Sunday at a casino buffet that had revoked his lifetime of free meals, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported. <br /> <br />John Noble, 53, mailed the newspaper an obsessive testimonial against the M Resort Spa Casino in nearby Henderson, where the man claimed officials had wrongfully banned him from the premises after female employees accused him of giving them unwanted attention. <br /> <br />Noble turned over 270 pages of documents relating to his case and a two-hour DVD detailing his struggles in a package that arrived the day after his suicide, the Review-Journal reported. <br /> <br />Authorities in the area received word of a car on fire in the casino’s parking garage at 4:50 p.m. Sunday, according to a release from the Henderson Police Department. But just as the M’s security staff extinguished the small blaze, gunshots were reported in the casino’s buffet restaurant, police said. <br /> <br />Cops discovered Noble dead with a single self-inflicted wound. Two people, including one who was hospitalized, sustained minor injuries in the incident, cops said. <br /> <br />It was the tragic culmination of Noble’s failed struggle to regain his standing at the casino, which awarded him free food privileges in 2010 for being an M “biggest winner” but exiled him three years later, the newspaper reported. <br /> <br />“Nobody will help me,” Noble says in a portion of the DVD that the newspaper posted. “You’ve got to fight for what you believe in, and I believe I was unjustifiably kicked out.” <br /> <br />Noble previously threatened suicide Easter Sunday 2013 and allegedly stalked an M employee, according to documents he sent to the paper. Casino officials had forbidden him from coming to the M three weeks before that incident, and Noble spent three days in a state psychiatric ward afterwards. <br /> <br />Upon his release, Noble continued his crusade, taking to Facebook to share M workers’ personal information and complain about his plight, his still-existing profile shows. <br /> <br />A representative for the M didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment early Tuesday. But the M’s vice president of marketing, Scotty Rutledge, told the Review-Journal that the casino was providing grief counseling to employees. He declined to comment further, citing a police investigation and a casino policy not to speak on incidents involving customers. <br /> <br />To the end, Noble apparently thought he could win over buffet workers to his cause. <br /> <br />“That’s the trouble — people do not get involved,” he says in the video. “That’s why this world is so screwed up. Have a little decency, people. Some people are reaching out for help and they don’t get it.”
