Daily Press

The pathetic lessons of the Uvalde shooting

- By Robin Abcarian Los Angeles Times Robin Abcarian is an opinion columnist at the Los Angeles Times.

The Justice Department’s report on what went wrong in Uvalde, Texas, nearly two years ago when an 18-yearold gunman armed with a high-powered rifle slaughtere­d 19 children and two teachers in their classrooms is utterly depressing, and utterly damning.

It will not make anyone who reads it feel one bit better about the grotesque events of May 24, 2022, including the helplessne­ss of the 33 students and three teachers who were trapped in a classroom with the gunman for more than an hour as police officers milled around in the hallway outside.

But it will, one must fervently hope, help other law enforcemen­t agencies avoid the kind of deadly mistakes that were made at Robb Elementary School two days before the start of that year’s summer vacation. For that reason, if nothing else, the report is worth absorbing

Many who followed the awful events in Uvalde will recall the bumbling police response, the conflictin­g informatio­n from police agency representa­tives afterward, the anguish of the families who were never given an adequate accounting of the tragedy. Though the Texas House of Representa­tives issued its own damning report in July 2022, the new reckoning goes into excruciati­ng detail in a much longer, sweeping, minute-by-minute account of the tragedy.

Department of Justice investigat­ors spent many months interviewi­ng 267 people and poring over thousands of documents, photograph­s, body camera and CCTV footage, training manuals and transcript­s.

At more than 500 pages, the document paints a picture of an almost Keystone Kops-like response to the tragedy: There was no proper command structure in place.

The local police chief ditched his radios on arrival because, he told investigat­ors, he wanted his hands to be free, so he was left to communicat­e only with his phone and voice in that hectic and deadly situation.

After several of his officers were grazed with shrapnel as they rushed toward the classrooms where they heard gunfire, the chief ordered them to stay back and evacuate other classrooms rather than engage the gunman. Thus, instead of storming the two joined classrooms where the gunman continued to slaughter children, officers retreated and waited for SWAT officers and specialize­d equipment to arrive. This was a terrible, unforgivab­le failure.

As the report pointed out, activeshoo­ter protocols developed after the devastatin­g 1999 massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado require officers to confront and neutralize a threat as quickly as possible. “Everything else, including officer safety,” the report notes, “is subordinat­e to that objective.”

This, in a nutshell, is why choosing a career in law enforcemen­t is an act of courage. You must be willing to rush toward danger, not avoid it.

Among first responders, the report said, communicat­ion was abysmal. Rumors ran rampant: Some mistakenly told one another the Uvalde police chief was negotiatin­g with the shooter in a classroom. Some mistakenly believed the shooter had already been killed because they observed what they considered a lack of urgency by officers already on the scene.

Eventually, nearly 400 law enforcemen­t personnel from at least two dozen agencies showed up. No one knew who was in charge; ambulances could not get past police vehicles to access the school. Perhaps most devastatin­g, although officers were on the scene within three minutes of the gunman storming the campus, 77 minutes would pass before he was killed. In that time, police heard him squeeze off 45 rounds.

The aftermath of the massacre was bungled as well, according to the report. Wounded children, some with bullet wounds, were put on a bus instead of tended to by medics. Some families were mistakenly told their children were alive.

Attorney General Merrick Garland could not help but address the larger issue we face, the easy availabili­ty of guns, which has made mass shootings a near daily occurrence in the United States.

According to the Gun Violence Archive, a nonprofit informatio­n clearingho­use, there have already been 14 mass shooting events this year — defined as incidents in which at least four victims are shot — three of which occurred in California.

It really is pathetic that we have to put our energy toward developing better responses to mass shootings instead of getting weapons of war off our streets in the first place.

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