Thursday, 28 Nov 2024

Texas police made ‘wrong decision’ waiting outside classroom, says official

Texas police made ‘wrong decision’ waiting outside classroom, says official


Texas police made ‘wrong decision’ waiting outside classroom, says official
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The head of the Texas department of public safety admitted on Friday afternoon that "of course it was the wrong decision" for armed police to wait for an extended period outside the classroom where the gunman in Tuesday's school shooting was killing children and teachers, without storming in.

Steven McCraw, department of public safety director, shed tears and said at a tense press conference in Uvalde, Texas, where 19 young children and two teachers were gunned down by a local 18-year-old that "there's no excuse" for the failure of trained personnel not to have intervened sooner.

At least 17 others were wounded and the victims were all inside one classroom.

At a separate news conference, Texas' governor, Greg Abbott, showed no sympathy for the controversy facing law enforcement in Uvalde, saying that local police officials had initially "misled" him about the speed and resolve of officers' response to the mass killing at Robb elementary on Tuesday.

Uvalde's mayor, Don McLaughlin, also claimed to be confused about Friday's revelations about the police response. And, without elaborating, he said his staff would make any "change" needed if deemed necessary after an investigation into the response.

McCraw, Abbott and McLaughlin spoke on Friday as questions and anger mounted in the community over gaps in information, contradictory answers given to repeated questions from parents and journalists about what had happened, and silence on other topics about why more deaths could not have been prevented.

The gunman, who had recently turned 18, came heavily armed to Robb elementary school in the small town on Tuesday and killed 21 people, after shooting and wounding his grandmother earlier.

He was ultimately shot dead at the school by a federal agent.

The attacker entered through a door that was meant to be locked but had been propped open, and after arriving in response to frantic calls from teachers trapped inside the school with the gunman barricaded in a classroom, armed law enforcement officers waited outside the door for about an hour while the killing continued.

A specialist Swat team, for which the officers had apparently been waiting, eventually breached the classroom and shot the killer dead.

After several days of stonewalling and contradictory responses by other officials, McCraw led the press conference on Friday and cited the person in charge of the special police department assigned to the school, without naming the person, who on the day had led the response and held the officers back.

"It was the wrong decision," McCraw conceded.

"The on-scene commander at the time believed it had transitioned from an active shooter [situation] to a barricaded subject," he said, adding the commander thought that at that point there remained "no children at risk".

"Obviously, based upon the information we [now] have, there were children in that classroom at risk," he said.

He choked up as he was asked about the apparent tragic error, when people had continued to call the 911 emergency service number throughout the hiatus and tell them there were children needing rescue and frantic parents outside the school were pleading with other officers there to move in and end the massacre.

"With the benefit of hindsight, of course it was not the right decision, it was the wrong decision. Period. There's no excuse for that," he said.

McCraw recounted some of the 911 calls, including several from a female who, in a whisper, reported "multiple dead" in a classroom. The unnamed caller, from inside the classroom, said there were eight to nine students still alive at that stage.

At 12.36pm local time, a 911 call that lasted for 21 seconds was received, from a child in the classroom, who was told to stay on the line and stay quiet.

The child, McCraw recounted, said: "Please send the police now."

Earlier, demands for answers multiplied as it emerged that extra state spending on school security and officers trained for mass shootings had not prevented the massacre.

Victor Escalon, the south Texas regional director of the state's department of public safety, said on Thursday armed officers arrived at Robb elementary in about four minutes, yet it was "approximately an hour later" that a tactical team of US border patrol arrived at the school, burst into the classroom and killed the gunman, while the other armed police waited outside.

Escalon had given incomplete answers to pointed questions from reporters at a press conference on Thursday about what had happened, including how the authorities had said that an armed officer tried to stop the shooter as he approached the school, then had said the opposite - that in fact there had not been anyone to intercept the shooter beforehand.

Telling the media he would try to get more answers, he said at one point: "Could anyone have gone [into the classroom] sooner? You have to understand, this is a small town."

On Friday, McCraw also addressed the subject of earlier statements about social media posts.

"I want to correct something that was said earlier on the investigation, that [the killer] posted on Facebook publicly that he was going to kill his grandmother and secondly he was going to shoot up a school.

"That didn't happen," McCraw said, adding that it was on a message to someone else.

On 14 March, the subject made an Instagram post saying "10 more days", the director said, to which a respondent asked: "Are you going to shoot up a school."

"Stop asking dumb questions and you'll see," Ramos allegedly replied.

Adriana Martinez, the mother of Ramos, said in an interview with a CNN local affiliate: "Forgive me, forgive my son."

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