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interests / alt.law-enforcement / Re: Officers could have stopped Uvalde gunman three minutes after he entered school, Texas public safety chief testifies

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Re: Officers could have stopped Uvalde gunman three minutes after he entered school, Texas public safety chief testifies

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Subject: Re: Officers could have stopped Uvalde gunman three minutes after he entered school, Texas public safety chief testifies
Date: Tue, 5 Jul 2022 05:39:53 +0200 (CEST)
From: chicken_...@democrats.rus (Chicken Tacos)
 by: Chicken Tacos - Tue, 5 Jul 2022 03:39 UTC

In article <XnsACBCC0CEF101gda@95.216.243.224>
<governor.swill@gmail.com> wrote:

Police had enough officers on the scene of the Uvalde school
massacre to have stopped the gunman three minutes after he
entered the building, and they never checked a classroom door to
see if it was locked, the head of the Texas state police
testified Tuesday, pronouncing the law enforcement response an
"abject failure."

Police officers with rifles instead stood and waited in a school
hallway for nearly an hour while the gunman carried out the May
24 attack at Robb Elementary School that left 19 children and
two teachers dead. The 18-year-old gunman used an AR-15-style
semi-automatic rifle.

"I don't care if you have on flip-flops and Bermuda shorts, you
go in," Col. Steve McCraw, director of the Texas Department of
Public Safety, said in blistering testimony at a state Senate
hearing.

The classroom door, it turned out, could not be locked from the
inside, yet there is no indication officers tried to open it
while the gunman was holed up, Col. Steve McCraw, director of
the Texas Department of Public Safety, said in blistering
testimony at a state Senate hearing. Instead, he said, police
waited around for a key.

"I have great reasons to believe it was never secured," McCraw
said of the door. "How about trying the door and seeing if it's
locked?"

Delays in the law enforcement response have become the focus of
federal, state and local investigations.

McCraw lit into Pete Arredondo, the Uvalde school district
police chief who was in charge, saying: "The only thing stopping
a hallway of dedicated officers from entering Room 111 and 112
was the on-scene commander who decided to place the lives of
officers before the lives of children."

"Obviously, not enough training was done in this situation,
plain and simple. Because terrible decisions were made by the on-
site commander," McCraw said. He said investigators have been
unable to "re-interview" Arredondo.

The public safety chief presented a timeline that said three
officers with two rifles entered the building less than three
minutes after the gunman. Several more officers entered minutes
after that.

The decision by police to hold back went against much of what
law enforcement has learned in the two decades since the 1999
Columbine High School shooting in Colorado in which 13 people
were killed, McCraw said.

"You don't wait for a SWAT team. You have one officer, that's
enough," he said. He also said officers did not need to wait for
shields to enter the classroom. The first shield arrived less
than 20 minutes after the shooter entered, according to McCraw.

Also, eight minutes after the shooter entered, an officer
reported that police had a "hooligan" crowbar that they could
use to break down the classroom door, McCraw said.

State police initially said the gunman entered the school
through an exterior door that had been propped open by a
teacher. However, McCraw said the teacher had closed the door,
but unbeknownst to her, it could be locked only from the
outside. The gunman "walked straight through," McCraw said.

The gunman knew the building well, having attended the fourth
grade in the same classrooms where he carried out the attack,
McCraw said. The gunman never communicated with police that day,
the public safety chief said.

Texas Sen. Paul Bettencourt said the entire premise of lockdown
and shooter training is worthless if the doors can't be locked.

Bettencourt challenged Arredondo to testify in public and said
he should have removed himself from the job immediately. He
angrily pointed out that shots were heard while police waited in
the hallway.

"There are at least six shots fired during this time," he said.
"Why is this person shooting? He's killing somebody. Yet this
incident commander finds every reason to do nothing."

McCraw spent nearly five hours offering the clearest picture yet
of the massacre, outlining a series of other missed
opportunities, communication breakdowns and errors based on an
investigation that has included roughly 700 interviews. Among
the missteps:

Arredondo did not have a radio with him.
Police and sheriff's radios did not work inside the school. Only
the radios of Border Patrol agents on the scene did, and they
did not work perfectly.
Some diagrams of the school that police used to coordinate their
response were wrong.
Questions about the law enforcement response began days after
the massacre. McCraw said three days after the shooting that
Arredondo made "the wrong decision" when he chose not to storm
the classroom for more than 70 minutes, even as trapped fourth
graders inside two classrooms were desperately calling 911 for
help and anguished parents outside the school begged officers to
go inside.

Arredondo later said he didn't consider himself the person in
charge and assumed someone else had taken control of the law
enforcement response. He declined repeated requests for comment
from The Associated Press.

As for the amount of time that elapsed before officers entered
the classroom, McCraw said: "In an active shooter environment,
that's intolerable."

"This set our profession back a decade. That's what it did," he
said of the police response in Uvalde.

Police haven't found anything that would be a red flag in the
shooter's school disciplinary files but learned through
interviews that he engaged in animal cruelty. "He walked around
with a bag of dead cats," McCraw said.

In the days and weeks after the shooting, authorities gave
conflicting and incorrect accounts of what happened, sometimes
withdrawing statements hours after making them. But McCraw
assured lawmakers: "Everything I've testified today is
corroborated."

McCraw said if he could make just one recommendation, it would
be for more training. He also said a "go-bag" should be put in
every state patrol car in Texas, including a shield and door-
breaching tools.

"I want every trooper to know how to breach and have the tools
to do it," he said.

Later in the day Tuesday, the Uvalde City Council voted
unanimously against giving Arredondo, who is a council member, a
leave of absence from appearing at public meetings. Relatives of
the shooting victims had pleaded with city leaders to instead
fire him.

The families are demanding accountability from law enforcement
after the Austin American-Statesman published a photo of armed
police in the school hallway. The images reviewed by the
newspaper show a timestamp taken nearly one hour before the
gunman was stopped.

Several family members of victims made emotional pleas during a
school board meeting on Monday to fire Arredondo.

"We were failed by Pete Arredondo," said Brett Cross, the uncle
and guardian of victim Uziyah Garcia. "He failed our kids,
teachers, parents, and city, and by keeping him on your staff,
y'all are continuing to fail us."

"My mom died protecting her students. But who was protecting my
mom?" said Lyliana Garcia, the daughter of Irma Garcia, one of
the two teachers who died trying to protect their students.

A senior sheriff's deputy told The New York Times that two
Uvalde city police officers also passed up a fleeting chance to
shoot the gunman before he entered the school.

The unidentified officers, one of whom was armed with an AR-15-
style rifle, said they feared hitting children playing in the
line of fire outside the school, Chief Deputy Ricardo Rios of
nearby Zavalla County told the newspaper.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/uvalde-texas-school-shooting-
officers-stop-gunman/?intcid=CNI-00-10aaa3a


interests / alt.law-enforcement / Re: Officers could have stopped Uvalde gunman three minutes after he entered school, Texas public safety chief testifies

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