Saskatoon StarPhoenix

JUSTICE DEPT. TO PROBE POLICE INACTION

AS ANGER MOUNTS, BIDEN VISITS TEXAS SCHOOL, MEETS WITH VICTIMS' FAMILIES

- JARRETT RENSHAW, GABRIELLA BORTER AND BRAD BROOKS in Uvalde, Texas

President Joe Biden tried to comfort families in the southern Texas town of Uvalde on Sunday after the United States' deadliest school shooting in a decade, as federal officials announced they would review local law enforcemen­t's slow response to the attack.

Anger has mounted over the decision by law enforcemen­t agencies in Uvalde to allow the shooter to remain in a classroom for nearly an hour while officers waited in the hallway and children inside the room made panicked 911 calls for help.

The president and first lady Jill Biden wiped away tears as they visited memorials at the Robb Elementary School where the gunman killed 19 students and two teachers, laying white roses and paying respects to makeshift shrines to the victims. “Do something,” a crowd chanted outside Sacred Heart Catholic Church as Biden exited after attending mass.

“We will,” he answered.

The Bidens also visited with victims' families and survivors for several hours before later meeting with first responders.

Police say the gunman, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos, entered the school on Tuesday with an AR15 semi-automatic rifle after earlier shooting his grandmothe­r, who survived.

Official accounts of how police responded to the shooting have flip-flopped wildly. The U.S. Department of Justice on Sunday said it would review local law enforcemen­t response at the request of Uvalde Mayor Don Mclaughlin.

Texas state and county authoritie­s say they are conducting their own inquiries.

“I feel sorry for them because they have to live with that mistake of just standing by,” Julian Moreno, a former pastor at Primera Iglesia Bautista church and great-grandfathe­r of one of the girls killed, said of Uvalde's police.

The Uvalde shooting has once again put gun control at the top of the nation's agenda, months ahead of the November midterm elections, with supporters of stronger gun laws arguing that the latest bloodshed represents a tipping point.

Biden, a Democrat, has repeatedly called for major reforms to America's gun laws but has been powerless to stop mass shootings or convince Republican­s that stricter controls could stem the carnage.

The Texas visit is Biden's third presidenti­al trip to a mass shooting site, including earlier this month when he visited Buffalo, New York, after a gunman killed 10 Black people in a Saturday afternoon attack at a grocery store.

Biden was accompanie­d on Sunday by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican who opposes new gun restrictio­ns, and other local officials.

“We need help, Governor Abbott,” some in the crowd yelled as Biden arrived at the school. “Shame on you, Abbott.”

Others shouted thanks to Biden as he arrived at the school.

Asked if she had a message for Biden, 11-year-old Bella Barboza, who was friends with one of the victims, said she was now scared to go to school and urged change.

“This world is not a good place for children to grow up in,” she said.

YES, WE NEED

NEW GUN LAWS. BUT WE

ALSO NEED A FOCUS ON

MENTAL HEALTH.

Ben Gonzalez, a lifelong Uvalde resident and father of four, was among those at the school memorial site on Sunday calling on leaders to help and saying Democrats and Republican­s need to work together.

“Yes, we need new gun laws. But we also need a focus on mental health. There is not just one answer to this problem,” he told Reuters.

White House aides and close allies say Biden is unlikely to wade into specific policy proposals or take executive action on firearms to avoid disrupting delicate negotiatio­ns in the divided Senate.

Democrats in the Senate also dialed down the rhetoric as negotiatio­ns continued during the chamber's Memorial Day holiday recess last week.

“We've got to be realistic about what we can achieve,” Senate Judiciary Chairman Dick Durbin told CNN'S State of the Union program on Sunday. Durbin's fellow Democrats narrowly control the 50-50 split Senate but need 60 votes to pass most legislatio­n.

Leading Republican­s like U.S. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, former president Donald Trump and Abbott have rejected calls for new gun control measures and instead suggested investing in mental health care or tightening school security.

Ramos, a high school dropout, had no criminal record and no history of mental illness but had posted threatenin­g messages on social media.

 ?? DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden comfort Robb Elementary School principal Mandy Gutierrez, with superinten­dent Hal Harrell,
left, on Sunday at the memorial outside the school honouring the victims killed in this week's school shooting in Uvalde, Texas.
DARIO LOPEZ-MILLS / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden comfort Robb Elementary School principal Mandy Gutierrez, with superinten­dent Hal Harrell, left, on Sunday at the memorial outside the school honouring the victims killed in this week's school shooting in Uvalde, Texas.

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