LAS VEGAS — The unprovoked knife attacks on the Las Vegas Strip on Thursday began with four performers dressed as showgirls.

It was just before 11:40 a.m. local time when they were approached by a man claiming to be a chef outside the Wynn Casino, where the performers were taking pictures with tourists.

The man wanted a photo with them, too. But when he pulled out a 12-inch kitchen knife, the performers began to back away. 

Within minutes, eight people would be wounded — two of them fatally. 

The injuries inflicted in that brief window ranged from stab wounds to the chest and back to puncture wounds to the liver and diaphragm. The victims were both locals and tourists, authorities say.

Those new details were laid out in a three-page arrest report by police that roughly outlines how the mass stabbing unfolded on the northern end of the Strip almost five years to the day after the October 2017 mass shooting on the opposite end of the famed tourism corridor.

Police identified the suspect in Thursday’s stabbing spree as 32-year-old Yoni Barrios, who faces two counts of murder and six counts of attempted murder.

On Friday afternoon, a judge ordered Barrios held without bail at a downtown Las Vegas jail until he is arraigned on the charges next week, at which point another judge could reconsider setting bail for the suspect.

Victim remembered as ‘devoted wife’

Among the first victims stabbed, according to the report, was performer Maris DiGiovanni, who went by the name Maris Jordan. She did not survive her injuries.

Trauma surgeon Dr. Kevin Kuruvilla pronounced her dead shortly after she arrived at University Medical Center. She was 30.

“Maris loved the beauty of life and lived it to the fullest without limitations,” her brother, Gage DiGiovanni, told the USA TODAY Network on Friday. “She was an authentic and caring friend, a devoted wife, a kickass sister and a loving daughter.”

MORE:Maris Jordan, Las Vegas stabbing victim, left ‘ripples of love’ around the world, family says