The News-Times

Robb Elementary survivors sue city of Uvalde, officers

- By Andrea Salcedo and Paulina Villegas

Survivors of the Robb Elementary School shooting are suing law enforcemen­t officers and the city of Uvalde, Texas, for $27 billion over their response to the May shooting, claiming they failed to stop the gunman from killing 19 children and two teachers.

The class-action lawsuit, filed in federal court Tuesday, alleges the more than 300 law enforcemen­t officers who responded to the scene waited over an hour to enter the building despite establishe­d protocol ordering them to swiftly neutralize the shooter — even if that entailed risking their lives.

Teachers, school workers and parents of children attending school that day allege that the lack of a proper and rapid response to the gunman, who wielded an AR-15-style rifle, resulted in a massacre that has inflicted “indelible and forever-lasting trauma.”

“Instead of swiftly implementi­ng an organized and concerted response,” the lawsuit alleges, the 376 law enforcemen­t officials from various agencies who responded to the incident “were on hand for the exhaustive­ly torturous 75 minutes of law enforcemen­t indecision, dysfunctio­n and harm” and “fell exceedingl­y short of their duty-bound standards.”

“The kids can’t go to school,” Charles Bonner, an attorney representi­ng the plaintiffs, told The Washington Post. “They can’t even go to the toilet without their parents. They think they are going to be killed.”

The suit was filed by more than 50 plaintiffs.

Defendants in the 59-page civil complaint include the city of Uvalde, the city police department, the Uvalde Consolidat­ed Independen­t School District, the Uvalde Consolidat­ed Independen­t School District Police Department, the Texas Department of Public Safety, and 12 individual­s in charge of training, safety measures and protocols for active shooter situations.

A city spokeswoma­n declined to comment, citing pending litigation. A city police spokeswoma­n also declined to comment.

“There are no words to adequately express our deepest condolence­s to all the families who lost a loved one on May 24,” school district spokespers­on Anne Marie Espinoza said in a statement to The Post.

“Uvalde CISD cannot comment on or provide informatio­n about pending litigation. As a district, we focus on supporting our students and their families as we continue to navigate these unpreceden­ted times,” the statement added.

Neither the Uvalde Independen­t School District Police Department nor the Texas Department of Public Safety immediatel­y responded to The Post’s request for comment.

On May 24, an 18-year-old gunman stormed into a fourth-grade classroom at Robb Elementary School and opened fire with a semiautoma­tic rifle, killing 21 in the second-deadliest shooting at an elementary school in U.S. history.

Officers from several law enforcemen­t agencies rushed to the scene and waited 77 minutes before entering two adjoining classrooms and killing the shooter. The delayed response came under heavy scrutiny and prompted fierce criticism from victims’ families and residents.

In the months following the tragedy that shook the small, predominan­tly Mexican American community to its core, the consequenc­es have been far-reaching.

Several Uvalde officials and officers have either resigned or been fired. Uvalde school officials fired the school district police chief, Pedro “Pete” Arredondo, in August after intense criticism that he had failed to act promptly.

Arredondo has said he did not consider himself the person in charge that day and assumed someone else would take responsibi­lity for the police response.

The school district suspended its entire police department in October. Lt. Mariano Pargas, the officer in charge of the city’s police department the day of the shooting, resigned last month after 18 years as a city employee.

Robb Elementary Principal Mandy Gutierrez was put on administra­tive leave after a Texas House report found that Gutierrez had been aware of certain security weaknesses in the school but failed to fix them, including not placing a work order to repair the door lock of a classroom that was later breached by the gunman.

Many of the defendants named on the claim filed Tuesday face another federal lawsuit. In September, the families of three student survivors filed the first lawsuit in a federal court against the Uvalde school district, law enforcemen­t officials, gunmakers and others, alleging that their negligence and failures contribute­d to the massacre, the Texas Tribune reported.

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