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Uvalde mayor disputes report that police missed opportunity to shoot gunman

Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin spoke at a press conference on May 27. Since the shooting at Robb Elementary, the mayor and state officials have been increasingly at odds over the law enforcement response to the shooting.
Evan L'Roy for The Texas Tribune
Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin spoke at a press conference on May 27. Since the shooting at Robb Elementary, the mayor and state officials have been increasingly at odds over the law enforcement response to the shooting.

Uvaldeā€™s mayor on Friday denied a recent report that said a city police officer had an opportunity to shoot the 18-year-old gunman who killed 19 children and two teachers inside Robb Elementary School last month before the gunman entered the school building.

[Uvalde officer asked permission to shoot gunman outside school but got no answer, report finds]

In a written statement, Mayor Don McLaughlin said that no Uvalde police officer saw the shooter before he entered the school and ā€œno Uvalde police officers had any opportunity to take a shot at the gunman.ā€

ā€œA Uvalde Police Department officer saw someone outside but was unsure of who he saw and observed children in the area as well,ā€ McLaughlin said. ā€œUltimately, it was a coach with children on the playground, not the shooter.ā€

McLaughlinā€™s comments come two days after the release of a report analyzing the law enforcement response to the shooting. The report by staff at the Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training Center at Texas State University in San Marcos said a Uvalde police officer had the gunman in his crosshairs and asked a supervisor for permission to shoot ā€” but the supervisor did not hear the request or responded too late.

ALERRT, created in 2002 to address the need for active-shooter response training for first responders, based its report on an hourlong briefing on June 1 by an ā€œinvestigating officer with knowledge of the event and investigative details,ā€ the report said.

The report said that ALERRT staff also reviewed surveillance footage from the school, Google Maps and a brief cellphone video.

The report does not identify which agency the investigator works for. The report does say that the Texas Department of Public Safety reached out to ALERRT soon after the attack ā€œto assess the law enforcement response.ā€

DPS and ALERRT didnā€™t immediately respond to an email from The Texas Tribune seeking comment.

McLaughlinā€™s statement is the latest in an ongoing public feud between the city and DPS. Last month, DPS Director Steve McCraw told a state Senate committee that the Uvalde police response to the shooting was an ā€œabject failureā€ and blamed the indecisiveness of the on-scene commander, who ā€œdecided to place the lives of officers before the lives of children.ā€

Law enforcement officers who responded to the shooting ā€” particularly Uvalde school district police Chief Pete Arredondo, who recently resigned as a City Council member ā€” have faced intense criticism for waiting more than an hour before entering the classrooms and killing the gunman.

McLaughlin, meanwhile, has accused state authorities of selectively releasing information to scapegoat local law enforcement and intentionally leaving out details about the stateā€™s response to the massacre.

ā€œMcCraw has continued to, whether you want to call it, lie, leak ā€¦ mislead or misstate information in order to distance his own troopers and rangers from the response,ā€ McLaughlin said last month after McCrawā€™s testimony.

The mayor said Friday that dozens of DPS troopers were at the school by the time the gunman entered the classroom where the students and teachers were killed.

ā€œIā€™ve said it once and will say it again, the premature release of piecemeal information or anything related to the May 24 Department of Public Safety (DPS)/Texas Rangers investigation is a disservice to families who lost children or parents because the true facts need to come out once all investigations/reviews, which the City expects will be thorough and fair, are complete,ā€ the mayor said. ā€œI firmly believe it is imperative the families are provided with complete, unbiased, and comprehensive information about this incident.ā€

DPS has also said the Texas Rangers are conducting an investigation into the shooting. The FBI and a legislative committee are also conducting their own investigations.

State Rep. Dustin Burrows, R-Lubbock, who chairs the legislative committee leading the inquiry, said he requested from DPS a 77-minute video showing police in a hallway outside the classroom where the shooting happened so that it can be made public and part of the committeeā€™s preliminary report.

In response to his request, a DPS official responded that the agency didnā€™t oppose releasing the video and felt that its release would ā€œassist us in providing as much transparency as possible to the public without interfering with the investigation,ā€ but Uvalde County District Attorney Christina Mitchell Busbee ā€œhas objected to releasing the video and has instructed us not to do so.ā€

DPS said it was deferring to Busbeeā€™s judgment because she is the person who has authority to determine whether any criminal charges result from the massacre.

Busbee has also been at the center of a dispute over a $5 million fund for the victimsā€™ families. After the shooting, Gov. Greg Abbott announced that the state would launch the Uvalde Together Resilience Center, then gave control of it to the local district attorney after consulting with local officials, the San Antonio Express-News reported Thursday.

This week, McLaughlin and state Sen. Roland Gutierrez, a Democrat who represents Uvalde, asked Abbott in a letter to give control of the fund to the Texas Division of Emergency Management because they believe Busbeeā€™s office is ā€œnot equipped or staffed to provide these services,ā€ the newspaper reported, quoting the mayor saying that families that need and requested assistance havenā€™t received it.

An Abbott spokesperson said the governor would support whomever local officials designate to run the center.

Disclosure: Google has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribuneā€™s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2022/07/08/uvalde-mayor-school-shooting/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

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