A Cheerleader’s Dream Trip Turned Deadly Inside a Vegas Hotel Room.

A trip that should have been filled with excitement and pride ended in a tragedy that left a community searching for answers.

According to police, 38-year-old Tawnia McGeehan traveled from Utah to Las Vegas with her 11-year-old daughter, Addi Smith, so the young cheerleader could compete with her Utah Xtreme Cheer team over the weekend. For Addi, it was more than just a competition—it was a moment she had likely been looking forward to, surrounded by teammates, energy, and the joy of performing.

But when the two failed to show up for a scheduled team meeting, concern quickly began to grow.

At first, it seemed unusual—but not alarming. Missed calls happen. Delays happen. Yet as hours passed and neither Tawnia nor Addi could be reached, that concern turned into something far more serious. Coaches and family members began trying to contact them repeatedly, hoping for any response.

None came.

Eventually, worried loved ones asked staff at the Rio Hotel & Casino, where the pair were staying, to check on them. Police were also contacted, and officers arrived around 10:45 a.m. Sunday to conduct a welfare check. However, according to authorities, they did not yet have enough legal grounds to force entry into the room.

It was a moment that, in hindsight, would carry weight.

Hours later, after continued pressure from family members, hotel security and police returned. This time, they entered the room.

What they found inside changed everything.

Both Tawnia and Addi were discovered dead from gunshot wounds.

Investigators say preliminary evidence suggests that the shooting occurred the night before. According to their early findings, Tawnia fatally shot her daughter sometime Saturday night, then turned the gun on herself. At the scene, officers also recovered what they described as an apparent suicide note, though its contents have not been made public.

There were no immediate signs of outside involvement.

No evidence pointing to a third person.

Just a silent room, and a sequence of events that only two people truly knew.

As news of the tragedy spread, the response from the community was immediate and emotional. Friends, teammates, and those who knew Addi began sharing tributes online, remembering her as a bright, joyful child who brought energy and warmth wherever she went.

“She was absolutely loved,” one message read.

Others described her smile, her spirit, and the way she lit up practices and competitions. For the Utah Xtreme Cheer team, the loss was not just of a teammate—but of a young life that had become part of their family.

Meanwhile, the investigation remains ongoing.

Authorities have not publicly discussed a motive, and many of the deeper questions remain unanswered. Cases like this often extend beyond a single moment, involving circumstances and emotions that are not always visible from the outside.

For those left behind, the grief is layered with confusion.

How does a trip meant to celebrate a child’s passion end this way?

What happened in the hours leading up to that night?

Were there signs that something was wrong?

At this stage, those answers are still out of reach.

What remains is the reality of loss—a young girl whose life was just beginning, a mother whose actions have left a lasting impact, and a community trying to understand something that feels impossible to explain.

Moments like this force difficult reflections.

Not just about what happened, but about what might have been happening beneath the surface—unseen, unheard, and unresolved. Because in many cases like this, the final act is not the beginning of the story.

It’s the end of something that had been building quietly over time.

And as investigators continue their work, one question continues to linger—

what really happened inside that hotel room… before everything came to an end?