Bangkok Post

Police face questions over massacre

Texas cops slammed over ‘late response’

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The gunman in the Texas school massacre barged unchalleng­ed through an unlocked door, then killed 19 children and two teachers while holed up in their classroom for an hour before a tactical team stormed in and killed him, police said on Thursday.

The latest official details from the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) on Tuesday’s mass shooting differed sharply from initial police accounts and raised questions about security measures at the elementary school and the response of law enforcemen­t.

The school district in Uvalde, Texas, about 130 kilometres west of San Antonio, has a standing policy of locking all entrances, including classroom doors, as a safety precaution. But one student told Reuters some doors were left unlocked the day of the shooting to allow visiting parents to come and go for an awards day event.

The newly detailed chronology came hours after videos emerged showing desperate parents outside Robb Elementary School during the attack. They pleaded with officers to storm the building, and some fathers had to be restrained.

The human toll of the rampage, which ranks as the deadliest US school shooting in nearly a decade, deepened with news that the husband of one of the slain teachers died of a heart attack on Thursday while preparing for his wife’s funeral.

At a briefing, DPS spokespers­on Victor Escalon said the gunman, Salvador Ramos, 18, made his way unimpeded on to the school grounds after crashing his pickup truck nearby. The carnage began 12 minutes later.

Preliminar­y police reports had said that Ramos, who drove to the school from his home after shooting and wounding his grandmothe­r there, was confronted by a school-based police officer as he ran toward the school.

Instead, no armed officer was present when Ramos arrived at the school, Mr Escalon said.

The suspect crashed his pickup truck nearby at 11.28am local time, opened fire on two people at a funeral home across the street, then scaled a fence onto school property and walked into one of the buildings through an unlocked rear door at 11.40am, he said.

Two responding officers entered the school four minutes later but took cover after Ramos fired multiple rounds at them, Mr Escalon said.

The shooter then barricaded himself inside the fourth-grade classroom of his victims, mostly 9- and 10-yearolds, for an hour before a US Border Patrol tactical team breached the room and fatally shot him, Mr Escalon said. Officers reported hearing at least 25 gunshots coming from inside the classroom early in the siege, he said.

The hour-long interval before border agents stormed in appeared to be at odds with an approach adopted by many law enforcemen­t agencies to confront “active shooters” at schools immediatel­y to stop bloodshed.

Asked if police should have made en masse entry sooner, Mr Escalon answered: “That’s a tough question,” adding that authoritie­s would offer more informatio­n as the investigat­ion proceeded.

He described a chaotic scene after the initial exchange of gunfire, with officers calling for backup and evacuating students and staff.

In one video posted on Facebook by a man named Angel Ledezma, parents can be seen breaking through yellow police tape and yelling at officers to go into the building.

“It’s already been an hour, and they still can’t get all the kids out,” he said in the video. He did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Another video posted on YouTube showed officers restrainin­g at least one adult. One woman can be heard saying: “Why let the children die? There’s shooting in there.”

“We got guys going in to get kids,” one officer is heard telling the crowd. “They’re working.”

 ?? AFP ?? Police officers lay flowers at a makeshift memorial outside Uvalde County Courthouse in Uvalde, Texas, on Thursday.
AFP Police officers lay flowers at a makeshift memorial outside Uvalde County Courthouse in Uvalde, Texas, on Thursday.

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