The Bakersfield Californian

School police chief a no-show at Uvalde City Council meeting

- BY JAKE BLEIBERG AND JAMIE STENGLE

UVALDE, Texas — The school district police chief criticized for waiting too long before ordering law enforcemen­t to confront and kill the gunman during a mass shooting at a Texas elementary school did not appear at a City Council meeting in Uvalde on Tuesday, despite being newly elected to the panel.

Mayor Don McLaughlin said he was unable to explain why the district police Chief Pete Arredondo wasn’t at the brief meeting. Two weeks ago, 19 students and two teachers were killed at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde. Law enforcemen­t and state officials have struggled to present an accurate timeline and details, and have stopped releasing informatio­n about the police response.

McLaughlin told reporters at the meeting that he was frustrated with the lack of informatio­n.

“We want facts and answers, just like everybody else,” the mayor said.

Steven McCraw, the head of the Texas Department of Public Safety, has said Arredondo, who was in charge of the multiagenc­y response on May 24, made the “wrong decision” to not order officers to breach the classroom more quickly to confront the gunman.

As the mayor spoke in Uvalde on Tuesday, lawmakers in Washington heard testimony from the son of a woman who was killed in a recent mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, as lawmakers work toward a bipartisan agreement on gun safety measures. And at a White House press briefing, actor Matthew McConaughe­y, a Uvalde native, spoke with passion about his conversati­ons with the families of the children who were killed and the need for more stringent gun control.

The gunman, 18-yearold Salvador Ramos, spent roughly 80 minutes inside Robb Elementary, and more than an hour passed from when the first officers followed him into the building and when he was killed, according to an official timeline. In the meantime, parents outside begged police to rush in and panicked children called 911 from inside.

Arredondo has not responded to repeated interview requests and questions from The Associated Press.

After the City Council meeting, Alfred Garza III, whose 10-year-old daughter, Amerie Jo, was among the Uvalde students killed, told reporters that he attended the meeting to see what else he could learn about what happened that day.

“I have so many questions and not every one can be answered. They’re still collecting data, they’re still collecting informatio­n on what happened,” Garza said.

He said he had been curious as to whether Arredondo would attend the meeting, and said he had “mixed feelings” about the district police chief’s absence.

“He obviously didn’t show up for a reason,” Garza said, adding that he assumed Arredondo thought if he did appear he would get a lot of questions.

Garza said he doesn’t have “a lot of ill will” toward Arredondo, nor does he blame just one person for what happened, but he does think more could have been done that day.

“They did take a long time to get in there,” Garza said.

Since the shooting, there have been tensions between state and local authoritie­s over how police handled the shooting and communicat­ed what happened to the public.

The Texas Department of Public Safety has begun referring questions about the investigat­ion to the Uvalde-area district attorney, Christina Mitchell Busbee. She hasn’t responded to repeated interview requests and questions from AP.

McLaughlin said he has asked officials for a briefing but “we’re not getting it.”

He said the city’s police chief was on vacation at the time of the shooting and that the acting city police commander was on the scene.

 ?? ERIC GAY / AP ?? Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin, Jr., speaks during a special emergency city council meeting on Tuesday in Uvalde, Texas, to reissue the mayor’s declaratio­n of a local state of disaster due to the recent school shooting at Robb Elementary School.
ERIC GAY / AP Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin, Jr., speaks during a special emergency city council meeting on Tuesday in Uvalde, Texas, to reissue the mayor’s declaratio­n of a local state of disaster due to the recent school shooting at Robb Elementary School.
 ?? Alfred Garza III, father of school shooting victim Amerie Jo Garza, attends a special emergency city council meeting on Tuesday in Uvalde, Texas. ??
Alfred Garza III, father of school shooting victim Amerie Jo Garza, attends a special emergency city council meeting on Tuesday in Uvalde, Texas.

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