Posted on May 25, 2022
A Border Patrol agent reportedly rushed into Uvalde school without backup to shoot and kill the...
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I have no idea if his actions changed the outcome but he should be commended for at least trying. Salute.
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Thank you my friend Lt Col Charlie Brown for letting us know, that a border patrol agent rushed into the Robb Elementary School and shot and killed 18-year-old Salvador Rolando Ramos.
Kudos to the border patrol agents who responded and hisses to the so-called law-enforcement officiers who stood by for an hour while Ramos was on his killing spree inside the elementary school.
Law Enforcement Talk Show Published May 31, 2022 25 Views
01:02 Law enforcement heroes or screwups in Texas school shooting?
LEO Round Table (law enforcement talk show)
Season 7, Episode 22a (1,740) filmed on 05/30/2022
Topic 1 concerns a discussion on the Texas Uvalde Elementary School Shooting and whether or not the law enforcement response was lacking during the incident that killed a total of 19 children and two teachers.
Show Panelists and Personalities:
Chip DeBlock (Host and retired police Detective)
Ward Meythaler (Attorney and former Federal Prosecutor)
John Newman (retired police assistant Chief)
Bret Bartlett (retired police Captain)
Randy Sutton (retired police Lieutenant)
David D'Agresta (retired police Officer and sheriff's Corporal)
Andrea Casale (retired police Officer)
Will Statzer (Producer)
https://rumble.com/v16upb4-law-enforcement-heroes-or-screwups-in-texas-school-shooting-leo-round-table.html
Prayers for the grieving family members and friends of those killed:
Students
Nevaeh Alyssa Bravo, 10
Jacklyn Jaylen Cazares, 9
Makenna Lee Elrod, 10
Jose Manuel Flores Jr., 10
Eliahna Amyah Garcia, 9
Uziyah Sergio Garcia, 10
Amerie Jo Garza, 10
Xavier James Lopez, 10
Jayce Carmelo Luevanos, 10
Tess Marie Mata, 10
Maranda Gail Mathis, 11
Alithia Haven Ramirez, 10
Annabell Guadalupe Rodriguez, 10
Maite Yuleana Rodriguez, 10
Alexandria Aniyah Rubio, 10
Layla Marie Salazar, 11
Jailah Nicole Silguero, 10
Eliahna Cruz Torres, 10
Rogelio Fernandez Torres, 10
Teachers
Irma Linda Garcia, 48
Eva Mireles, 44
Background from {[en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robb_Elementary_School_shooting]}
On May 24, 2022, Salvador Ramos and his 66-year-old grandmother had an argument over a phone bill at their home in Uvalde, during which he shot her in the face[45] before taking her Ford pickup truck.[46][47][48] She survived and sought help from neighbors while police officers were called in.[49] She was then airlifted to a hospital in San Antonio in critical condition.[50][51] Using his Facebook account, he sent three private messages to a 15-year-old girl from Germany whom he had met online prior to the shooting:[52][53] the first to say that he was going to shoot his grandmother; a second to say that he had shot his grandmother; and a third, about 15 minutes before the shooting, to say that he was going to open fire at an elementary school.[54][55][56] A spokesperson for Meta, the parent company of Facebook, said the posts were "private one-to-one text messages" discovered after the shooting took place.[55]
Ramos crashed his grandmother's truck through a barricade and into a concrete ditch outside Robb Elementary School at 11:28 a.m. CDT (UTC–5).[49][57] According to police, he wore a tactical vest for carrying ammunition that did not include ballistic protection or armor insert panels,[58] plus a backpack, and all-black clothing, while carrying an AR-15 style rifle and seven 30-round magazines.[49] He brought into the school only one of the two rifles that he legally bought, and left the other in the crashed truck.[59] A witness said he first fired at two people at a nearby funeral home, both of whom escaped uninjured.[60] Police reported receiving 9-1-1 calls about a vehicle having crashed near the school.[57][61][62] After hearing of the 9-1-1 call, a school resource officer drove to the school's campus and pursued a teacher who they erroneously believed to be the gunman, driving past the actual gunman in the process.[63]
Ramos entered the school through its west-facing entrance door, which had been shut by a teacher who had seen him.[64] The entrance door did not lock despite being designed to be locked when shut.[65] UCISD's police chief estimated that the shooting began at 11:32; according to a Facebook post by the school, the school was placed in lockdown at 11:43 in response to gunshots heard in the vicinity.[66]
After entering the building, Ramos walked down two short hallways and then entered a classroom that was internally connected to another classroom.[54] A survivor of the shooting said that, as teacher Irma Garcia attempted to lock the door to the classroom, he shot the door's window, then backed Garcia into the classroom, and said, "Goodnight", as he shot and killed her.[67] Another survivor recounted that Ramos said, "You're all gonna die", after entering the classroom.[68] He then opened fire on the rest of the students and another teacher in the room.[67][69] According to a surviving student, Ramos played "sad music" before the shooting began.[69] All of the fatalities were located in adjoining classrooms 111 and 112, which Ramos had entered.[70]
Most of the shooting occurred inside the building within the first few minutes; Ramos was inside the classroom for over an hour while armed police remained outside the classroom and building.[16] Multiple students played dead while the shooting took place, including one student, 11-year-old Miah Cerrillo, who smeared herself with the blood of one of her dead classmates to give credence to the subterfuge.[46][67] According to a student who hid in the adjoining classroom, Ramos came in and slightly crouched down saying, "It's time to die", before opening fire.[71] Afterwards, a responding officer called out, "Yell if you need help!" A girl in the adjoining classroom said, "Help". Ramos heard the girl, entered the classroom, and shot her.[72] A student said that the officer then barged into the classroom, and Ramos fired at the officer, causing more officers to return fire.[72] Officers arrived four minutes after Ramos entered the school and attempted to make entry, but they retreated after he fired at them.[73] Officers were not successful in establishing negotiations.[16]
Arnulfo Reyes, a teacher in classroom 111 who received multiple gunshot wounds, recalled he instructed his students to "get under the table and act like you're asleep". Ramos then arrived and shot him, then he fired indiscriminately around classroom 111. Reyes said he "didn't hear talk for a while", but later on, Ramos unleashed a second round of gunfire at students, and Reyes said "if he didn't get them the first time, he got them the second time".[74] All 11 students in classroom 111 during the shooting died. Reyes pretended to be unconscious on the floor, but Ramos then shot him again.[74] According to Reyes, he heard law enforcement approach his classroom from what sounded like the hallway three times, but they did not enter; during one of these occasions, he heard a student from the adjoining classroom 112 saying, "Officer, we're in here. We're in here." As law enforcement had already left, Reyes said Ramos "walked over there, and he shot again".[74][75] Reyes later heard law enforcement telling Ramos to come out of the classroom to talk, saying they did not want to hurt anyone.[76] Separately, Reyes said in past security checks, the classroom 111 door that was meant to be locked during lessons remained unlocked because "the latch was stuck", and that he had told the principal about this issue.[74]
A male student in classroom 109 said that around 15 minutes after the shooting began, the gunman approached classroom 109's door and pulled its handle, but his teacher had jammed the door after hearing gunfire.[77] The gunman shot through the door's glass window, striking another student and the teacher in classroom 109, then left.[78] With a Texas official stating that the gunman had briefly returned into the hallway after entering classrooms 111 and 112 (without specifying what time this occurred), The Washington Post reported that "this is likely when those in Room 109 were shot at", before the gunman returned to classrooms 111 and 112.[78]
Additional emergency response
Police lines set up outside of Robb Elementary School
United States Marshals Service deputies drove nearly 70 miles (110 km) to the school and arrived at 12:10 p.m., where they helped officers initially confront the shooter, render first aid, and secure the perimeter.[79] At 12:17, UCISD sent out a message on Twitter that there was an active shooter at the elementary school.[80] The school district's police chief, Pedro Arredondo, erroneously determined that the situation had "transitioned from an active shooter to a barricaded subject" according to the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS). With Ramos thought to be contained, officials believed they had bought enough time to bring in tactical units.[81]
According to Uvalde County judge Bill Mitchell, teacher Eva Mireles, from inside the adjoining classrooms where the shooter was, called her husband, Ruben Ruiz, a Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District officer, who was outside the school. According to DPS Director Steven McCraw, during the call Mireles told Ruiz that she had been shot and was dying; when Ruiz "tried to move forward into the hallway, he was detained [by law enforcement] and they took his gun away from him and escorted him off the scene." Mireles eventually died from her gunshot wounds.[82][83]
After the police cordoned the outside of the school, parents pleaded with officers to enter the building. When they did not, parents offered to enter the building themselves.[84][85] Officers held back and tackled parents who tried to enter the school, further warning that they would use tasers if the parents did not comply with directions; video clips were uploaded to social media, including one that depicted a parent being pinned to the ground.[86] Police pepper-sprayed a parent trying to get to their child, and an officer tackled the father of another student. Police reportedly used a taser on a parent who approached a bus to get their child.[15] A mother of two students at the school was placed in handcuffs by officers for attempting to enter the school.[15][87] When released from the handcuffs, she jumped the fence and retrieved her children, exiting before police entered.[88] A video clip showed parents questioning why police were not trying to save their children, to which an officer replies: "Because I'm having to deal with you!"[89]
A United States Border Patrol Tactical Unit (BORTAC) agent rushed to the scene after receiving a text message from his wife, who was a teacher there. Prior to this, the officer had been off-duty before receiving the news. The officer immediately set out with a shotgun his barber had lent him and arrived on the scene approximately an hour after the first responders arrived.[90] He then proceeded to help evacuate children. Contrary to online rumors and social media posts, he did not enter the school or kill the shooter.[91][92] Additional BORTAC agents arrived, but they did not have a battering ram or other breaching tools, so a U.S. Marshal on the scene provided agents with a ballistic shield. Ramos stayed in the classroom for around one hour, hiding behind a steel door that officers said they could not open until they obtained a master key from the janitor.[93][94] A second report now conflicts with this account, stating that the door was never locked.[95] After the door was opened, a BORTAC agent entered the room holding the shield, followed by two other BORTAC agents, a Border Patrol Search, Trauma, and Rescue agent (BORSTAR), and at least one sheriff's deputy. Ramos reportedly opened fire at the group from a closet in the room before officials returned fire and killed him.[96] As UCISD police officers exchanged fire with Ramos, BORTAC agents joined them in response to a request for assistance; one sustained an injury.[97] According to Governor Greg Abbott, the injured Border Patrol agent fatally shot Ramos.[98] Later reports state that a tactical team breached the room and killed the shooter.[91][92]
Account by Pedro Arredondo
In an interview by The Texas Tribune published on June 9, Arredondo said he arrived at the school thinking he was the first law enforcement officer on the scene; he abandoned his police and campus radios because he wanted his hands free to shoot the gunman, and he also thought the radios would slow him down. He said one radio's antenna would hit him when running, while the other radio was prone to falling off his belt when running, and that he knew from experience that the radios did not work in some school buildings.[99] Arredondo said he was unaware of 911 calls being made from the classrooms the gunman was in, due to the lack of his radios and no one telling him; the other officers in the school hallway also had no radio communications.[99]
In The Texas Tribune interview, Arredondo said that he did not consider himself as the incident commander for law enforcement; instead, his role was a frontline responder, with him assuming someone else was in command.[99] Arredondo said that he attempted to open classroom 111's door, while a Uvalde Police Department officer tried classroom 112's door, but both were locked.[99] According to Arredondo, the classroom door had a steel jamb, that prevented law enforcement from easily breaching the door. Arredondo was aware that the gunman was firing shots from within the classroom, grazing some police officers. According to Arredondo, he and the officers in the school hallway did their best to remain quiet, only whispering to each other, fearing that if the gunman heard them, he would shoot at them.[99] He spent over an hour in the hallway, of which he held back from the classroom doors for 40 minutes to avoid attracting gunfire.[99] Arredondo said that during the wait for door breaching tools, he tried to talk to the gunman through the walls to establish rapport, but got no response.[99]
Also in The Texas Tribune interview, Arredondo said he was provided with six keys, which he tried on a door adjacent to the room where the gunman was, but none opened the door; later he received another 20-30 keys which also did not work, and that eventually, other officers called his cellphone to inform him that they obtained a suitable key to open the door.[99] Arredondo denied cowardice and incompetence, stating that law enforcement's "objective was to save as many lives as we could, and the extraction of the students from the classrooms by all that were involved saved over 500 of our Uvalde students and teachers before we gained access to the shooter and eliminated the threat.
Victims
Nineteen students and two teachers were killed in the shooting:[112][113][114]
Students
Nevaeh Alyssa Bravo, 10
Jacklyn Jaylen Cazares, 9
Makenna Lee Elrod, 10
Jose Manuel Flores Jr., 10
Eliahna Amyah Garcia, 9
Uziyah Sergio Garcia, 10
Amerie Jo Garza, 10
Xavier James Lopez, 10
Jayce Carmelo Luevanos, 10
Tess Marie Mata, 10
Maranda Gail Mathis, 11
Alithia Haven Ramirez, 10
Annabell Guadalupe Rodriguez, 10
Maite Yuleana Rodriguez, 10
Alexandria Aniyah Rubio, 10
Layla Marie Salazar, 11
Jailah Nicole Silguero, 10
Eliahna Cruz Torres, 10
Rogelio Fernandez Torres, 10
Teachers
Irma Linda Garcia, 48
Eva Mireles, 44
The children were in the third and fourth grades.[115] The teachers taught in the same fourth-grade classroom.[116][117]
Eighteen people were injured, including the perpetrator's grandmother and two police officers.[3] Abbott said the two officers were struck by bullets but had no serious injuries.[97][118] Several victims died in the ambulance on the way to the hospital, including Mireles.[18] Uvalde Memorial Hospital's CEO reported that eleven children and three other people were admitted for emergency care following the shooting.[34] Four were released, and two, described only as a male and a female, were dead upon arrival.[119] Several other victims were taken to the University Hospital in San Antonio.[3]
Perpetrator
Salvador Ramos
Born May 16, 2004
North Dakota, U.S.
Died May 24, 2022 (aged 18)
Uvalde, Texas, U.S.
Cause of death Gunshot wounds
Other names Salvador Rolando Ramos
Occupation None
Parent(s) Salvador Ramos Sr.
Adriana Martinez
Motive Unknown
Details
Date May 24, 2022
Location(s) Uvalde, Texas
Target(s) Grandmother, students and staff at Robb Elementary school, two police officers
Killed 21
Injured 18
Born on May 16, 2004, in North Dakota,[120] Salvador Ramos was a resident of Uvalde from an early age and was a former student at Uvalde High School.[121] He also attended Robb Elementary School for 4th grade in the same classroom where he was killed.[122] He did not have a criminal record or any documented mental health issues;[54] he had previously posted violent threats online.[123] According to his classmates and some of his friends, Ramos had a stutter and a strong lisp, for which he was often bullied; he frequently had fistfights with classmates, occasionally with boxing gloves that he carried around with him, and he had few friends. He was scheduled to finish high school in 2022, but his frequent absences made him more likely to repeat the twelfth grade. He eventually dropped out of school.[93][124]
Ramos's social media acquaintances said he openly abused and killed animals such as cats and would livestream the abuse on Yubo.[125] Other social media acquaintances said that he would also livestream himself on Yubo threatening to kidnap and rape girls who used the app, as well as threatening to commit a school shooting.[123] Ramos's account was reported to Yubo, but no action was taken.[123][126] Up until a month before the shooting, Ramos worked at a local Wendy's and had been employed there for at least a year. According to the store's night manager, he went out of his way to keep to himself.[127] One of his coworkers said he was occasionally rude to his female co-workers, to whom he sent inappropriate text messages, and would intimidate co-workers at his job by asking them, "Do you know who I am?"[93] Ramos's coworkers referred to him by names including "school shooter" because he had long hair and frequently wore black clothing.[128]
A year before the shooting, Ramos started posting pictures to his Instagram account of automatic rifles that were on his wish list. According to a friend of his, he would often drive around at night with another friend, shooting at strangers with a BB gun and egging cars. According to a man who was in a relationship with Ramos's mother, Ramos moved out of his mother's house and into his grandparents' house two months before the shooting, after an argument broke out between him and his mother over her turning off the Wi-Fi.[55] People close to Ramos's family described his mother as a drug user and said he frequently argued with his mother. Two months prior to the shooting, he posted a video of himself on Instagram aggressively arguing with his mother and referring to her as a "bitch".[124][129] Ramos's mother described her son as "not a monster" but admitted that he could "be aggressive".[130] His grandfather said that his grandson did not have a driver's license and did not know how to drive.[47] According to his father, Ramos had a girlfriend, who lived in San Antonio.[131] On May 14, Ramos sent a private Instagram message reading, "10 more days". A person responded, "Are you going to shoot up a school or something?" He replied, "No, stop asking dumb questions. You'll see."[123]
According to the Texas Department of Public Safety, in September 2021, Ramos asked his older sister to buy him a gun, but she refused.[64] On May 17, 2022, a day after his 18th birthday, he legally purchased a Smith & Wesson semi-automatic rifle from a local gun store; he purchased another rifle three days later.[132] Investigators later found that his gun had a "hellfire" trigger device, which allows a semi-automatic weapon to be fired like an automatic.[133] Ramos sent an Instagram message to an acquaintance he met through Yubo, which showed the receipt for an AR-15 style rifle purchased from Georgia-based online retailer Daniel Defense eight days before the shooting.[1][134][135] He posted a picture of two rifles on his Instagram account three days before the shooting.[136]
Ahead of the shooting, Ramos had purchased 1,657 total rounds of ammunition,[137] which included 375 rounds of 5.56 NATO ammunition purchased on May 18, 2022.[132] A total of 315 rounds were found inside the school, consisting of 142 spent cartridges and 173 live rounds; additionally, a total of 922 rounds were found on school property outside the building, consisting of 22 spent cartridges and 900 live rounds. Overall, Ramos fired 164 rounds during the shooting.[137] Police and Border Patrol officers fired a combined total of 35 rounds during the shooting; 8 in the hallway and 27 in the classroom where Ramos was killed.[138]
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FYI SGT Jim Arnold SSgt David M. LTC (Join to see) COL Ronald Diana 1SG Frank Boynton SGT Mary G. CPL Douglas Chrysler SSgt Kelly D. PO3 Edward Riddle Sgt (Join to see) CWO4 Terrence Clark MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D.SPC Woody Bullard CPL Ronald Keyes JrSPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D GySgt Jack Wallace SMSgt Lawrence McCarterCMDCM John F. "Doc" Bradshaw
Kudos to the border patrol agents who responded and hisses to the so-called law-enforcement officiers who stood by for an hour while Ramos was on his killing spree inside the elementary school.
Law Enforcement Talk Show Published May 31, 2022 25 Views
01:02 Law enforcement heroes or screwups in Texas school shooting?
LEO Round Table (law enforcement talk show)
Season 7, Episode 22a (1,740) filmed on 05/30/2022
Topic 1 concerns a discussion on the Texas Uvalde Elementary School Shooting and whether or not the law enforcement response was lacking during the incident that killed a total of 19 children and two teachers.
Show Panelists and Personalities:
Chip DeBlock (Host and retired police Detective)
Ward Meythaler (Attorney and former Federal Prosecutor)
John Newman (retired police assistant Chief)
Bret Bartlett (retired police Captain)
Randy Sutton (retired police Lieutenant)
David D'Agresta (retired police Officer and sheriff's Corporal)
Andrea Casale (retired police Officer)
Will Statzer (Producer)
https://rumble.com/v16upb4-law-enforcement-heroes-or-screwups-in-texas-school-shooting-leo-round-table.html
Prayers for the grieving family members and friends of those killed:
Students
Nevaeh Alyssa Bravo, 10
Jacklyn Jaylen Cazares, 9
Makenna Lee Elrod, 10
Jose Manuel Flores Jr., 10
Eliahna Amyah Garcia, 9
Uziyah Sergio Garcia, 10
Amerie Jo Garza, 10
Xavier James Lopez, 10
Jayce Carmelo Luevanos, 10
Tess Marie Mata, 10
Maranda Gail Mathis, 11
Alithia Haven Ramirez, 10
Annabell Guadalupe Rodriguez, 10
Maite Yuleana Rodriguez, 10
Alexandria Aniyah Rubio, 10
Layla Marie Salazar, 11
Jailah Nicole Silguero, 10
Eliahna Cruz Torres, 10
Rogelio Fernandez Torres, 10
Teachers
Irma Linda Garcia, 48
Eva Mireles, 44
Background from {[en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robb_Elementary_School_shooting]}
On May 24, 2022, Salvador Ramos and his 66-year-old grandmother had an argument over a phone bill at their home in Uvalde, during which he shot her in the face[45] before taking her Ford pickup truck.[46][47][48] She survived and sought help from neighbors while police officers were called in.[49] She was then airlifted to a hospital in San Antonio in critical condition.[50][51] Using his Facebook account, he sent three private messages to a 15-year-old girl from Germany whom he had met online prior to the shooting:[52][53] the first to say that he was going to shoot his grandmother; a second to say that he had shot his grandmother; and a third, about 15 minutes before the shooting, to say that he was going to open fire at an elementary school.[54][55][56] A spokesperson for Meta, the parent company of Facebook, said the posts were "private one-to-one text messages" discovered after the shooting took place.[55]
Ramos crashed his grandmother's truck through a barricade and into a concrete ditch outside Robb Elementary School at 11:28 a.m. CDT (UTC–5).[49][57] According to police, he wore a tactical vest for carrying ammunition that did not include ballistic protection or armor insert panels,[58] plus a backpack, and all-black clothing, while carrying an AR-15 style rifle and seven 30-round magazines.[49] He brought into the school only one of the two rifles that he legally bought, and left the other in the crashed truck.[59] A witness said he first fired at two people at a nearby funeral home, both of whom escaped uninjured.[60] Police reported receiving 9-1-1 calls about a vehicle having crashed near the school.[57][61][62] After hearing of the 9-1-1 call, a school resource officer drove to the school's campus and pursued a teacher who they erroneously believed to be the gunman, driving past the actual gunman in the process.[63]
Ramos entered the school through its west-facing entrance door, which had been shut by a teacher who had seen him.[64] The entrance door did not lock despite being designed to be locked when shut.[65] UCISD's police chief estimated that the shooting began at 11:32; according to a Facebook post by the school, the school was placed in lockdown at 11:43 in response to gunshots heard in the vicinity.[66]
After entering the building, Ramos walked down two short hallways and then entered a classroom that was internally connected to another classroom.[54] A survivor of the shooting said that, as teacher Irma Garcia attempted to lock the door to the classroom, he shot the door's window, then backed Garcia into the classroom, and said, "Goodnight", as he shot and killed her.[67] Another survivor recounted that Ramos said, "You're all gonna die", after entering the classroom.[68] He then opened fire on the rest of the students and another teacher in the room.[67][69] According to a surviving student, Ramos played "sad music" before the shooting began.[69] All of the fatalities were located in adjoining classrooms 111 and 112, which Ramos had entered.[70]
Most of the shooting occurred inside the building within the first few minutes; Ramos was inside the classroom for over an hour while armed police remained outside the classroom and building.[16] Multiple students played dead while the shooting took place, including one student, 11-year-old Miah Cerrillo, who smeared herself with the blood of one of her dead classmates to give credence to the subterfuge.[46][67] According to a student who hid in the adjoining classroom, Ramos came in and slightly crouched down saying, "It's time to die", before opening fire.[71] Afterwards, a responding officer called out, "Yell if you need help!" A girl in the adjoining classroom said, "Help". Ramos heard the girl, entered the classroom, and shot her.[72] A student said that the officer then barged into the classroom, and Ramos fired at the officer, causing more officers to return fire.[72] Officers arrived four minutes after Ramos entered the school and attempted to make entry, but they retreated after he fired at them.[73] Officers were not successful in establishing negotiations.[16]
Arnulfo Reyes, a teacher in classroom 111 who received multiple gunshot wounds, recalled he instructed his students to "get under the table and act like you're asleep". Ramos then arrived and shot him, then he fired indiscriminately around classroom 111. Reyes said he "didn't hear talk for a while", but later on, Ramos unleashed a second round of gunfire at students, and Reyes said "if he didn't get them the first time, he got them the second time".[74] All 11 students in classroom 111 during the shooting died. Reyes pretended to be unconscious on the floor, but Ramos then shot him again.[74] According to Reyes, he heard law enforcement approach his classroom from what sounded like the hallway three times, but they did not enter; during one of these occasions, he heard a student from the adjoining classroom 112 saying, "Officer, we're in here. We're in here." As law enforcement had already left, Reyes said Ramos "walked over there, and he shot again".[74][75] Reyes later heard law enforcement telling Ramos to come out of the classroom to talk, saying they did not want to hurt anyone.[76] Separately, Reyes said in past security checks, the classroom 111 door that was meant to be locked during lessons remained unlocked because "the latch was stuck", and that he had told the principal about this issue.[74]
A male student in classroom 109 said that around 15 minutes after the shooting began, the gunman approached classroom 109's door and pulled its handle, but his teacher had jammed the door after hearing gunfire.[77] The gunman shot through the door's glass window, striking another student and the teacher in classroom 109, then left.[78] With a Texas official stating that the gunman had briefly returned into the hallway after entering classrooms 111 and 112 (without specifying what time this occurred), The Washington Post reported that "this is likely when those in Room 109 were shot at", before the gunman returned to classrooms 111 and 112.[78]
Additional emergency response
Police lines set up outside of Robb Elementary School
United States Marshals Service deputies drove nearly 70 miles (110 km) to the school and arrived at 12:10 p.m., where they helped officers initially confront the shooter, render first aid, and secure the perimeter.[79] At 12:17, UCISD sent out a message on Twitter that there was an active shooter at the elementary school.[80] The school district's police chief, Pedro Arredondo, erroneously determined that the situation had "transitioned from an active shooter to a barricaded subject" according to the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS). With Ramos thought to be contained, officials believed they had bought enough time to bring in tactical units.[81]
According to Uvalde County judge Bill Mitchell, teacher Eva Mireles, from inside the adjoining classrooms where the shooter was, called her husband, Ruben Ruiz, a Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District officer, who was outside the school. According to DPS Director Steven McCraw, during the call Mireles told Ruiz that she had been shot and was dying; when Ruiz "tried to move forward into the hallway, he was detained [by law enforcement] and they took his gun away from him and escorted him off the scene." Mireles eventually died from her gunshot wounds.[82][83]
After the police cordoned the outside of the school, parents pleaded with officers to enter the building. When they did not, parents offered to enter the building themselves.[84][85] Officers held back and tackled parents who tried to enter the school, further warning that they would use tasers if the parents did not comply with directions; video clips were uploaded to social media, including one that depicted a parent being pinned to the ground.[86] Police pepper-sprayed a parent trying to get to their child, and an officer tackled the father of another student. Police reportedly used a taser on a parent who approached a bus to get their child.[15] A mother of two students at the school was placed in handcuffs by officers for attempting to enter the school.[15][87] When released from the handcuffs, she jumped the fence and retrieved her children, exiting before police entered.[88] A video clip showed parents questioning why police were not trying to save their children, to which an officer replies: "Because I'm having to deal with you!"[89]
A United States Border Patrol Tactical Unit (BORTAC) agent rushed to the scene after receiving a text message from his wife, who was a teacher there. Prior to this, the officer had been off-duty before receiving the news. The officer immediately set out with a shotgun his barber had lent him and arrived on the scene approximately an hour after the first responders arrived.[90] He then proceeded to help evacuate children. Contrary to online rumors and social media posts, he did not enter the school or kill the shooter.[91][92] Additional BORTAC agents arrived, but they did not have a battering ram or other breaching tools, so a U.S. Marshal on the scene provided agents with a ballistic shield. Ramos stayed in the classroom for around one hour, hiding behind a steel door that officers said they could not open until they obtained a master key from the janitor.[93][94] A second report now conflicts with this account, stating that the door was never locked.[95] After the door was opened, a BORTAC agent entered the room holding the shield, followed by two other BORTAC agents, a Border Patrol Search, Trauma, and Rescue agent (BORSTAR), and at least one sheriff's deputy. Ramos reportedly opened fire at the group from a closet in the room before officials returned fire and killed him.[96] As UCISD police officers exchanged fire with Ramos, BORTAC agents joined them in response to a request for assistance; one sustained an injury.[97] According to Governor Greg Abbott, the injured Border Patrol agent fatally shot Ramos.[98] Later reports state that a tactical team breached the room and killed the shooter.[91][92]
Account by Pedro Arredondo
In an interview by The Texas Tribune published on June 9, Arredondo said he arrived at the school thinking he was the first law enforcement officer on the scene; he abandoned his police and campus radios because he wanted his hands free to shoot the gunman, and he also thought the radios would slow him down. He said one radio's antenna would hit him when running, while the other radio was prone to falling off his belt when running, and that he knew from experience that the radios did not work in some school buildings.[99] Arredondo said he was unaware of 911 calls being made from the classrooms the gunman was in, due to the lack of his radios and no one telling him; the other officers in the school hallway also had no radio communications.[99]
In The Texas Tribune interview, Arredondo said that he did not consider himself as the incident commander for law enforcement; instead, his role was a frontline responder, with him assuming someone else was in command.[99] Arredondo said that he attempted to open classroom 111's door, while a Uvalde Police Department officer tried classroom 112's door, but both were locked.[99] According to Arredondo, the classroom door had a steel jamb, that prevented law enforcement from easily breaching the door. Arredondo was aware that the gunman was firing shots from within the classroom, grazing some police officers. According to Arredondo, he and the officers in the school hallway did their best to remain quiet, only whispering to each other, fearing that if the gunman heard them, he would shoot at them.[99] He spent over an hour in the hallway, of which he held back from the classroom doors for 40 minutes to avoid attracting gunfire.[99] Arredondo said that during the wait for door breaching tools, he tried to talk to the gunman through the walls to establish rapport, but got no response.[99]
Also in The Texas Tribune interview, Arredondo said he was provided with six keys, which he tried on a door adjacent to the room where the gunman was, but none opened the door; later he received another 20-30 keys which also did not work, and that eventually, other officers called his cellphone to inform him that they obtained a suitable key to open the door.[99] Arredondo denied cowardice and incompetence, stating that law enforcement's "objective was to save as many lives as we could, and the extraction of the students from the classrooms by all that were involved saved over 500 of our Uvalde students and teachers before we gained access to the shooter and eliminated the threat.
Victims
Nineteen students and two teachers were killed in the shooting:[112][113][114]
Students
Nevaeh Alyssa Bravo, 10
Jacklyn Jaylen Cazares, 9
Makenna Lee Elrod, 10
Jose Manuel Flores Jr., 10
Eliahna Amyah Garcia, 9
Uziyah Sergio Garcia, 10
Amerie Jo Garza, 10
Xavier James Lopez, 10
Jayce Carmelo Luevanos, 10
Tess Marie Mata, 10
Maranda Gail Mathis, 11
Alithia Haven Ramirez, 10
Annabell Guadalupe Rodriguez, 10
Maite Yuleana Rodriguez, 10
Alexandria Aniyah Rubio, 10
Layla Marie Salazar, 11
Jailah Nicole Silguero, 10
Eliahna Cruz Torres, 10
Rogelio Fernandez Torres, 10
Teachers
Irma Linda Garcia, 48
Eva Mireles, 44
The children were in the third and fourth grades.[115] The teachers taught in the same fourth-grade classroom.[116][117]
Eighteen people were injured, including the perpetrator's grandmother and two police officers.[3] Abbott said the two officers were struck by bullets but had no serious injuries.[97][118] Several victims died in the ambulance on the way to the hospital, including Mireles.[18] Uvalde Memorial Hospital's CEO reported that eleven children and three other people were admitted for emergency care following the shooting.[34] Four were released, and two, described only as a male and a female, were dead upon arrival.[119] Several other victims were taken to the University Hospital in San Antonio.[3]
Perpetrator
Salvador Ramos
Born May 16, 2004
North Dakota, U.S.
Died May 24, 2022 (aged 18)
Uvalde, Texas, U.S.
Cause of death Gunshot wounds
Other names Salvador Rolando Ramos
Occupation None
Parent(s) Salvador Ramos Sr.
Adriana Martinez
Motive Unknown
Details
Date May 24, 2022
Location(s) Uvalde, Texas
Target(s) Grandmother, students and staff at Robb Elementary school, two police officers
Killed 21
Injured 18
Born on May 16, 2004, in North Dakota,[120] Salvador Ramos was a resident of Uvalde from an early age and was a former student at Uvalde High School.[121] He also attended Robb Elementary School for 4th grade in the same classroom where he was killed.[122] He did not have a criminal record or any documented mental health issues;[54] he had previously posted violent threats online.[123] According to his classmates and some of his friends, Ramos had a stutter and a strong lisp, for which he was often bullied; he frequently had fistfights with classmates, occasionally with boxing gloves that he carried around with him, and he had few friends. He was scheduled to finish high school in 2022, but his frequent absences made him more likely to repeat the twelfth grade. He eventually dropped out of school.[93][124]
Ramos's social media acquaintances said he openly abused and killed animals such as cats and would livestream the abuse on Yubo.[125] Other social media acquaintances said that he would also livestream himself on Yubo threatening to kidnap and rape girls who used the app, as well as threatening to commit a school shooting.[123] Ramos's account was reported to Yubo, but no action was taken.[123][126] Up until a month before the shooting, Ramos worked at a local Wendy's and had been employed there for at least a year. According to the store's night manager, he went out of his way to keep to himself.[127] One of his coworkers said he was occasionally rude to his female co-workers, to whom he sent inappropriate text messages, and would intimidate co-workers at his job by asking them, "Do you know who I am?"[93] Ramos's coworkers referred to him by names including "school shooter" because he had long hair and frequently wore black clothing.[128]
A year before the shooting, Ramos started posting pictures to his Instagram account of automatic rifles that were on his wish list. According to a friend of his, he would often drive around at night with another friend, shooting at strangers with a BB gun and egging cars. According to a man who was in a relationship with Ramos's mother, Ramos moved out of his mother's house and into his grandparents' house two months before the shooting, after an argument broke out between him and his mother over her turning off the Wi-Fi.[55] People close to Ramos's family described his mother as a drug user and said he frequently argued with his mother. Two months prior to the shooting, he posted a video of himself on Instagram aggressively arguing with his mother and referring to her as a "bitch".[124][129] Ramos's mother described her son as "not a monster" but admitted that he could "be aggressive".[130] His grandfather said that his grandson did not have a driver's license and did not know how to drive.[47] According to his father, Ramos had a girlfriend, who lived in San Antonio.[131] On May 14, Ramos sent a private Instagram message reading, "10 more days". A person responded, "Are you going to shoot up a school or something?" He replied, "No, stop asking dumb questions. You'll see."[123]
According to the Texas Department of Public Safety, in September 2021, Ramos asked his older sister to buy him a gun, but she refused.[64] On May 17, 2022, a day after his 18th birthday, he legally purchased a Smith & Wesson semi-automatic rifle from a local gun store; he purchased another rifle three days later.[132] Investigators later found that his gun had a "hellfire" trigger device, which allows a semi-automatic weapon to be fired like an automatic.[133] Ramos sent an Instagram message to an acquaintance he met through Yubo, which showed the receipt for an AR-15 style rifle purchased from Georgia-based online retailer Daniel Defense eight days before the shooting.[1][134][135] He posted a picture of two rifles on his Instagram account three days before the shooting.[136]
Ahead of the shooting, Ramos had purchased 1,657 total rounds of ammunition,[137] which included 375 rounds of 5.56 NATO ammunition purchased on May 18, 2022.[132] A total of 315 rounds were found inside the school, consisting of 142 spent cartridges and 173 live rounds; additionally, a total of 922 rounds were found on school property outside the building, consisting of 22 spent cartridges and 900 live rounds. Overall, Ramos fired 164 rounds during the shooting.[137] Police and Border Patrol officers fired a combined total of 35 rounds during the shooting; 8 in the hallway and 27 in the classroom where Ramos was killed.[138]
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FYI SGT Jim Arnold SSgt David M. LTC (Join to see) COL Ronald Diana 1SG Frank Boynton SGT Mary G. CPL Douglas Chrysler SSgt Kelly D. PO3 Edward Riddle Sgt (Join to see) CWO4 Terrence Clark MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D.SPC Woody Bullard CPL Ronald Keyes JrSPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D GySgt Jack Wallace SMSgt Lawrence McCarterCMDCM John F. "Doc" Bradshaw
Law Enforcement Heroes Or Screwups In Texas School Shooting? LEO Round Table S07E22a
01:02 Law enforcement heroes or screwups in Texas school shooting? LEO Round Table (law enforcement talk show) Season 7, Episode 22a (1,740) filmed on 05/30/2022 Topic 1 concerns a discussion on the T
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PO3 Edward Riddle
Thank You Brother Steve for this info about this HERO off-duty Border Patrol agent who rushed in and killed the Uvalde school shooter. Of course, we definitely need more of his kind.
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It's good to see that someone had the balls to do something. All the law enforcement standing around waiting for someone to make a decision should be fired as well as their bosses. It's time that ex nilitary people who are not afraid of heading into the fray should be hired and put in charge. Army soldiers and Marines who saw combat would not have cowered.
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