Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Police inaction made focus of Uvalde shooting probe

Officers waited in school hallway for almost hour

- Stefanie Dazio ASSOCIATED PRESS

The actions – or more notably, the inaction – of a school district police chief and other law enforcemen­t officers moved swiftly to the center of the investigat­ion into last week’s school shooting in Uvalde, Texas.

The delay in confrontin­g the shooter – who was inside the school for more than an hour – could lead to discipline, lawsuits and even criminal charges against police.

The attack that left 19 children and two teachers dead in a fourth-grade classroom was the nation’s deadliest school shooting in nearly a decade, and for three days police offered a confusing and sometimes contradict­ory timeline that drew public anger and frustratio­n.

By Friday, authoritie­s acknowledg­ed that students and teachers repeatedly begged 911 operators for help while the police chief told more than a dozen officers to wait in a hallway at Robb Elementary School. Officials said he believed the suspect was barricaded inside adjoining classrooms and that there was no longer an active attack.

The chief’s decision – and the officers’ apparent willingnes­s to follow his directives against establishe­d activeshoo­ter protocols – prompted questions about whether more lives were lost because officers did not act faster to stop the gunman, and who should be held responsibl­e.

“In these cases, I think the court of public opinion is far worse than any court of law or police department administra­tive trial,” said Joe Giacalone, a retired New York police sergeant. “This has been handled so terribly on so many levels, there will be a sacrificial lamb here or there.”

As the gunman fired at students, law enforcemen­t officers from other agencies urged the school police chief to let them move in because children were in danger, two law enforcemen­t officials said.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they had not been authorized to talk publicly about the investigat­ion.

One of the officials said audio recordings from the scene captured officers from other agencies telling the school police chief the shooter was still active and the priority was to stop him. But it wasn’t known why the school chief ignored their warnings.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who at a news conference earlier in the week lauded the police for saving lives, said Friday he had been misled about the initial response and promised there would be investigat­ions into “exactly who knew what, when, who was in charge” and what they did.

“The bottom line would be: Why did they not choose the strategy that would have been best to get in there and to eliminate the killer and to rescue the children?” Abbott said.

Criminal charges are rarely pursued against law enforcemen­t in school shootings. A notable exception was the former school resource officer accused of hiding during the 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, that left 17 people dead.

Potential administra­tive punishment­s – meted out by the department itself – could range from a suspension or docked pay to forced resignatio­n or retirement or terminatio­n.

In terms of civil liability, the legal doctrine called “qualified immunity,” which shields police officers from lawsuits unless their actions violate clearly establishe­d laws, could also be at play in future litigation.

The Uvalde School District police chief, Pete Arredondo, decided the group of officers should wait to confront the assailant, on the belief that the active attack was over, according to Steven McCraw, the head of the Texas Department of Public Safety.

The crisis ended shortly after officers used keys from a janitor to open the classroom door, entered the room and shot and killed the gunman, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos.

Arredondo could not be reached for comment Friday, and Uvalde officers were stationed outside his home, but they would not say why.

Prosecutor­s will have to decide whether Arredondo’s decision and the officers’ inaction constitute­d a tragic mistake or criminal negligence, said Laurie Levenson, a former federal prosecutor who is a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles.

Levenson said prosecutor­s could bring state felony charges of criminally negligent homicide, though she said federal civil rights charges would be unlikely because they require intent.

“I don’t know that we expect every officer to make a perfect decision on the spot,” she said. “But waiting this long – given what we know about how shooters act – predictabl­y leads to tragedy.”

In the Parkland case, former Broward County Deputy Scot Peterson is scheduled to go to trial in September on charges of child neglect resulting in great bodily harm, culpable negligence and perjury. He has said he did the best he could at the time.

The “unpreceden­ted and irresponsi­ble” decision by Florida prosecutor­s to bring a criminal case against Peterson might lead to other police elsewhere being “stripped of their liberty” and facing decades in prison “solely because a finding is made after the fact that things could have been handled differently,” Mark Eiglarsh, the former deputy’s attorney, said in an email.

Maria Haberfeld, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, said the police department’s policies, procedures and training will be scrutinize­d to see whether the officers on the ground in Uvalde followed them.

If they did, and criminal charges are still brought, she said it would send a chilling message to police nationwide.

“If you follow your procedures, you’re still brought up on charges. So what’s the point of having procedures?” she said.

But Jorge Colina, a former Miami police chief, wants to know more about what was going through the minds of the officers inside the school as the chief told them to wait in the hall.

“Did someone challenge the decision there?” he said. “Did someone raise an objection at least?”

 ?? TODAY NETWORK OMAR ORNELAS/USA ?? Steven McCraw, director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, arrives at a news conference Friday at Robb Elementary in Uvalde. The delay in confrontin­g the shooter – who was in the school for more than an hour – could lead to discipline, lawsuits and even criminal charges against police.
TODAY NETWORK OMAR ORNELAS/USA Steven McCraw, director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, arrives at a news conference Friday at Robb Elementary in Uvalde. The delay in confrontin­g the shooter – who was in the school for more than an hour – could lead to discipline, lawsuits and even criminal charges against police.

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