The Denver Post

Anger rises over police response

Officials say district officer not at school; gunman entered via unlocked door

- By Jake Bleiberg, Jim Vertuno and Elliot Spagat

UVALDE, TEXAS » It was 11:28 a.m. when the Ford pickup slammed into a ditch behind the low-slung Texas school and the driver jumped out carrying an AR-15style rifle.

Twelve minutes after that, authoritie­s say, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos was in the hallways of Robb Elementary School. Soon he entered a fourth-grade classroom. And there he killed 19 schoolchil­dren and two teachers in a stillunexp­lained spasm of violence.

At 12:58 p.m., law enforcemen­t radio chatter said Ramos had been killed and the siege was over.

What happened in those 90 minutes, in a working-class neighborho­od near the edge of the little town of Uvalde, has fueled mounting public anger and scrutiny over law enforcemen­t’s response to Tuesday’s rampage.

On Thursday, authoritie­s largely ignored questions about why officers had not been able to stop the shooter sooner, with Victor Escalon, regional director for the Texas Department of Public Safety, telling reporters he had “taken all those questions into considerat­ion” and would offer updates later.

The media briefing, called by Texas safety officials to clarify the timeline of the attack, provided bits of previously unknown informatio­n. But by the time it ended, it had added to the troubling questions surroundin­g the attack, including about the time it took police to reach the scene and confront the gunman, and the apparent failure to lock a school door he entered.

After two days of providing often conflictin­g informatio­n, investigat­ors said that a school district police officer was not inside the school when Ramos arrived, and, contrary to their previous reports, the officer had not confronted Ramos outside the building.

Instead, they sketched out a timeline notable for unexplaine­d delays by law enforcemen­t.

After crashing his truck, Ramos fired on two people coming out of a nearby funeral home, Escalon said. He then entered the school ”unobstruct­ed” through an apparently unlocked door at about 11:40 a.m.

But the first police officers did not arrive on the scene until 12 minutes after the crash and did not enter the school to pursue the shooter until four minutes after that. Inside, they were driven back by gunfire from Ramos and took cover, Escalon said.

The crisis came to an end after a group of Border Patrol tactical officers entered the school about an hour later, at 12:45 p.m., said Texas Department of Public Safety spokespers­on Travis Considine. They engaged in a shootout with the gunman, who was holed up in the fourth-grade classroom. Moments before 1 p.m., he was dead.

Escalon said that during that time, the officers called for backup, negotiator­s and tactical teams, while evacuating students and teachers.

Many other details of the case and the response remained murky. The motive for the massacre — the nation’s deadliest school shooting since Newtown, Conn., almost a decade ago — remained under investigat­ion, with authoritie­s saying Ramos had no known criminal or mental health history.

During the siege, frustrated onlookers urged police officers to charge into the school, according to witnesses.

“Go in there! Go in there!” women shouted at the officers soon after the attack began, said Juan Carranza, 24, who watched the scene from outside a house across the street.

Carranza said the officers should have entered the school sooner: “There were more of them. There was just one of him.”

Border Patrol Chief Raul Ortiz did not give a timeline but said repeatedly that the tactical officers from his agency who arrived at the school did not hesitate. He said they moved rapidly to enter the building, lining up in a “stack” behind an agent holding up a shield.

“What we wanted to make sure is to act quickly, act swiftly, and that’s exactly what those agents did,” Ortiz told Fox News.

But a law enforcemen­t official said that in the building, the agents had trouble breaching the classroom door and had to get a worker to open the room with a key.

Department of Public Safety spokesman Lt. Christophe­r Olivarez told CNN investigat­ors were trying to establish whether the classroom was, in fact, locked or barricaded.

Javier Cazares, whose daughter, Jacklyn, was killed in the attack, said he raced to the school as the massacre unfolded. When he arrived, he saw two officers outside the school and about five others escorting students out of the building. But 15 or 20 minutes passed before the arrival of officers with shields, equipped to confront the gunman, he said.

As more parents flocked to the school, he and others pressed police to act, Cazares said. He heard about four gunshots before he and the others were ordered back to a parking lot.

“A lot of us were arguing with the police, ‘You all need to go in there. You all need to do your jobs.’ Their response was, ‘We can’t do our jobs because you guys are interferin­g,’” he said.

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