Police 'wrong' not to breach door during Texas shooting

AFP
A top Texas security official said on Friday that police were wrong to delay storming the classroom where a teen gunman was holed up with dead and wounded children.
AFP
Police 'wrong' not to breach door during Texas shooting
AFP

Director and Colonel of the Texas Department of Public Safety Steven C. McCraw speaks at a press conference using a crime scene outline of the Robb Elementary School showing the path of the gunman outside the school in Uvalde, Texas, on May 27, 2022.

A top Texas security official said on Friday that police were wrong to delay storming the classroom where a teen gunman was holed up with dead and wounded children – fueling fears that police inaction cost lives in Uvalde.

Police have come under intense criticism since Tuesday's tragedy over why it took well over an hour to neutralize the gunman – who ultimately killed 19 children and two teachers at Robb Elementary School.

"From the benefit of hindsight... it was the wrong decision, period," Texas Department of Public Safety director Steven McCraw told an emotional news conference, at which his voice broke repeatedly as he was assailed by questions over the delay.

"From what we know, we believe there should have been an entry as soon as you can," McCraw said, adding: "If I thought it would help, I'd apologize."

McCraw revealed in harrowing detail a series of emergency calls – including by a child begging for police help – that were made from the two adjoining classrooms where the gunman was barricaded.

But in seeking to explain the delay, he also said the on-scene commander believed at the time that the 18-year-old gunman Salvador Ramos was in there alone, with no survivors, after his initial assault.

"I'm not defending anything, but you go back in the timeline, there was a barrage, hundreds of rounds were pumped in in four minutes, okay, into those two classrooms," McCraw said.

"Any firing afterward was sporadic and it was at the door. So the belief is that there may not be anybody living anymore."

McCraw separately told reporters, however, that a 911 call received at 12:16pm – one of several made from inside the classrooms – reported eight or nine children still alive.

As many as 19 officers were outside the classroom door at that time, plus an unknown number of tactical team members who had just arrived, according to McCraw's timeline.

The door was eventually opened at 12:50pm with keys provided by a janitor.

McCraw said the caller – a child who dialed 911 multiple times – begged for police to come. Her final call was cut off as she made it outside.

Texas Governor Gregg Abbott meanwhile told journalists who grilled him during a testy news conference Friday that he was given inaccurate information in the wake of the massacre.

"I was misled," Abbott said. "The information that I was given turned out in part to be inaccurate, and I'm absolutely livid about that."

Horror and trauma

The Uvalde shooting was the deadliest since 20 children and six staff were killed at the Sandy Hook school in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012.

Highlighting the horror and trauma of the Uvalde massacre, 11-year-old Miah Cerrillo described smearing herself with the blood of a dead classmate in a bid to hide from the gunman, saying she lay there for what felt like hours until help finally came.

Cerrillo, whose hair has begun to fall out in clumps since the massacre, also told CNN that she and a friend scrabbled for their dead teacher's cellphone and used it to make an urgent plea to 911 operators for help.

President Joe Biden will visit Uvalde on Sunday to once again make the case for gun control, as activists set about galvanizing voters on the issue in the run-up to November's midterm election.

Despite the scourge of mass shootings, efforts at nationwide gun control – from banning assault rifles to mandating mental health and criminal background checks on buyers – have repeatedly failed, although polls show support from a majority of Americans.


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