Daily Southtown

Federal review of Uvalde police response initiated

Team of nine will examine shooting, issue public report

- By Michael Balsamo

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department has named a team of nine people, including an FBI official and former police chiefs, to aid in a review of the law enforcemen­t response to the Uvalde, Texas, elementary school shooting May 24 that left 19 children and two teachers dead.

Attorney General Merrick Garland announced the team during a meeting Wednesday in his office in Washington. The critical incident review is being led by the Justice Department’s Office of Community Oriented Policing Services.

The review will include an examinatio­n of police policies, training and communicat­ion, along with the deployment of officers and tactics, the DOJ said. It will also examine who was in command of the incident and how police prepared for potential active-shooter incidents.

The team gathered for its first meeting Wednesday around a conference table in Garland’s office, with a few of the members appearing virtually on a large television screen.

Garland said the review would be comprehens­ive, transparen­t and independen­t.

“We will be assessing what happened that day,” he said. “We will be doing site visits to the school, we will be conducting interviews of an extremely wide variety of stakeholde­rs, witnesses, families, law enforcemen­t, government officials, school officials, and we will be reviewing the resources that were made available in the aftermath.”

The findings and recommenda­tions will be detailed in a report that will be made public, he said.

Garland said the team has already begun its work, though the department didn’t provide specific informatio­n on whether any members of the team have been to Uvalde, a town of about 15,000 residents.

The Justice Department said it would move as expeditiou­sly as possible in developing the report.

The review was requested by Uvalde’s mayor. Such a review is somewhat rare, and most after-action reports that come after a mass shooting are generally compiled by local law

enforcemen­t agencies or outside groups.

The DOJ conducted similar reviews after 14 people were killed in a terrorist attack in San Bernardino, Calif., in 2015 and after the mass shooting at the Pulse Nightclub in Orlando, Fla., the deadliest attack on the LGBTQ community in U.S. history, which left 49 people dead and 53 people wounded in 2016.

Two weeks ago, the 19 students and two teachers were killed at Robb Elementary School.

Law enforcemen­t and state officials have struggled to present an accurate timeline and details, and they have stopped releasing informatio­n about the police response.

The gunman, Salvador Ramos, 18, spent roughly 80 minutes inside Robb Elementary, and more than an hour passed from when the first officers followed him into the building to when he was killed, according to an official timeline.

The review comes as state officials have already been examining the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the shooting.

A spokesman for the Texas Department of Public Safety has said the school district police chief who served as

on-site commander — and who officials have said made the decision not to breach a classroom sooner, believing it had shifted from an active shooting to a hostage situation — had stopped speaking with state investigat­ors.

But the chief, Pete Arredondo, later told CNN that he was speaking regularly with Texas Department of Public Safety investigat­ors.

Texas officials have stopped answering questions about the response and haven’t said whether Arredondo is now cooperatin­g with them.

When asked what the Justice Department would do if someone refused to cooperate in the federal review, Garland said Justice officials “expect voluntary cooperatio­n from everybody at every level, and we have been promised that cooperatio­n.”

Uvalde’s mayor, Don McLaughlin, praised Garland for the “swift action” in beginning the review and vowed the city would fully cooperate.

The team includes: Rick Braziel, the former police

chief in Sacramento, Calif.;

Gene Deisinger, who was a deputy chief at Virginia Tech; Frank Fernandez, who served as the director of public safety in Coral Gables, Fla.; Albert Guarnieri, a unit chief at the FBI; Mark Lomax, who worked as a major with the Pennsylvan­ia State Police; Laura McElroy, the CEO of McElroy Media Group; John Mina, the sheriff in Orange County, Fla.; April Naturale, an assistant vice president at Vibrant Emotional Health; and Kristen Ziman, the former police chief in Aurora, Ill.

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP ?? Mourners visit a memorial Friday at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, honoring the victims of the May 24 attack that left 19 students and two teachers dead.
ERIC GAY/AP Mourners visit a memorial Friday at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, honoring the victims of the May 24 attack that left 19 students and two teachers dead.

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