Uvalde School Shooting and Videos Located Below
Uvalde Police Records from the Uvalde Police Department
Uvalde officials release bodycam footage from Robb Elementary shooting
Officials in Uvalde, Texas have released police body camera footage and a collection of audio and video recordings of the deadly mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in 2022.
The footage release comes after the Associated Press and other news organizations brought a lawsuit against the city because officials initially refused to publicly release information from the shooting, which left 19 students and two teachers dead.
One of the first calls that police received that day was from a woman who reported a truck crashed into a ditch and a person was running onto the school’s campus, the AP reported.
“Oh my god, they have a gun,” she told police.
A few minutes later, a man calls to say, “He’s shooting at the kids! Get back!” He informed police that the 18-year-old gunman was inside the school.
“Oh my God in the name of Jesus. He’s inside the school shooting at the kids,” he said.
According to the body camera footage from police, an officer asks the gunman to “please don’t hurt anyone else” and to put his gun down. It showed blood on the floors in hallways and classrooms.
‘I don’t have a radio:’ New recording shows former Uvalde school police chief called non-emergency line
UVALDE, Texas – The top school law enforcement officer in Uvalde at the time of the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in 2022 didn’t have his radio on him while responding to the shooting.
Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District Police Chief Pete Arredondo, who has since been charged with 10 criminal counts of endangering or abandoning the welfare of a child, is heard talking with the police department over the phone in newly obtained audio recordings.
Arredondo is no longer the chief of Uvalde CISD.
“Hey, hey, hey, this is Arrendondo. This is Arrendondo. Can you hear me? Can you hear me?” the former chief said. “I have to tell you. We’re at the emergency right now. I’m inside the building. I’ve been inside the building with this man.”
Arredondo went on to tell the dispatcher that the suspect out-powered him and his two other officers with an AR-15. The police officers only had their pistols.
“I need a lot of firepower, so I need this building surrounded,” Arredondo said. “We need this place surrounded. And if you have SWAT, I need them set up on a building on the south side of this building, which is the building nearest to the funeral home. They need to be outside this building prepared, because we don’t have the firepower right now. It’s all pistol. And he has, he has an AR-15.”
New report clears Uvalde police in school shooting response
March 2024 – UVALDE, Texas – Families of children killed at Robb Elementary School walked out of a Uvalde City Council meeting Thursday as the city unveiled a report that recommended all Uvalde police officers be exonerated of wrongdoing in their response to the shooting.
The independent investigation commissioned by the City of Uvalde left families demanding accountability for officers who waited over an hour to intervene as a gunman killed 19 children and two teachers.
Former Austin Police Department detective Jesse Prado examined the actions of each Uvalde police officer as they responded to the deadliest school shooting in Texas history on May 24, 2022.
The report recommends that each police officer should be “exonerated,” stating in most of their cases: “No evidence of serious acts of misconduct in direct violation of Uvalde Police Department’s policies was found in his behavior in response to the incident. I find that (this officer) acted in good faith.”
The meeting often erupted into frustrated screaming, the crowd chanting “coward” directed toward Prado as he left the room shortly after his remarks. Pressure from the crowd brought him back, in which he spent about an hour listening to families lambast his report.
‘Cascading failures’ in police response to Uvalde school shooting, DOJ report finds
It took 600 pages just to say that Texas troopers, Uvalde police and the Uvalde sheriff’s department were COWARDS!
UVALDE, Texas – A 575-page document from the Department of Justice reveals themes related to leadership, as well as a lack of communication, collaboration and cooperation in the days and months following.
Uvalde police officers subpoenaed by Texas grand jury over school shooting response
February 2024 – Law enforcement agents who responded to the 2022 Uvalde school mass shooting have been ordered to appear before a grand jury investigating police response, according to a report.
On 24 May 2022, a gunman walked into the Robb Elementary School, Texas, and killed 21 people, including 19 students and two adults.
Questions were raised on police response as it took 77 minutes to stop the 18-year-old shooter after he first entered the school.
Uvalde Police School Shooting Massacre
Uvalde Texas – On May 24, 2022, nineteen students and two teachers were fatally shot, and seventeen others were wounded at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas
Uvalde Police entered the School just 3 minutes after a gunman entered. Police Officers waited 77 minutes to confront the gunman, while kids were being killed.
As the police reports and police records from the Uvalde Police Department come in, they will be located in a Link at the bottom of this page.
Who were the Texas DPS Troopers at the Uvalde School Shooting?
8/2022 – Here’s a list of the names of Texas DPS Troopers cowards who were station in Uvalde County, as well as all the surrounding counties on May 24, 2022. There were 91 Texas DPS Troopers there that day at the school shooting. More Texas DPS files here.
Open Records Requests from the Uvalde Police Department
Pete Arredondo before becoming Police Chief in Uvalde was demoted from his previous job
8/2022 -Eight years before ago before Pete Arredondo became Uvalde Police Chief, he was demoted from a high-ranking position at the Webb County Sheriff’s Office.
Arredondo “couldn’t get along with people,” Webb County Sheriff Martin Cuellar told the San Antonio Express-News, according to the report. Cuellar also said that he demoted Arredondo from assistant chief to commander in 2014.
“He just didn’t fit the qualifications or the work that I set out for him,” Cuellar said, according to the report.
Chief Arredondo Suspended Following damning police report
7/2022 – The announcement followed the Sunday release of a 77-page report by a Texas House Investigative Committee reviewing the actions taken by law enforcement on May 24, when it took officers 77 minutes to confront a gunman who killed 19 students and two teachers.
One of the revelations made in the report was that the police response disregarded its own active shooting training.
“They failed to prioritize saving the lives of innocent victims over their own safety,” the document said.
Uvalde school police chief quits city council amid fury over shooting response
6/2022 – Uvalde Police school district police chief is resigning from his community’s city council amid criticism of the law enforcement response to the shooting that killed 19 students and two teachers at Robb elementary in May.
Pedro “Pete” Arredondo stepped down from the city council post to which he was sworn in just seven days after the massacre.
Pedro “Pete” Arredondo is a coward
Arredondo was his county’s highest paid law enforcement official, earning $90,750 each year after becoming the Uvalde school district’s police chief in 2020. The local sheriff’s salary, by contrast, is about $77,915.
Police responding to so-called active shooters have been trained for at least two decades to confront the assailants as soon as practical rather than wait for reinforcements, a practice that was developed amid countless mass killings across the US over the past two decades.
But instead of ordering officers to go in, Arredondo – who was on site at the school – reportedly had them wait while he called the city police force for reinforcements.
“We don’t have enough firepower right now,” Arredondo said, in part, according to a committee transcript of that call.
Arredondo also purportedly worried that the door to the classroom where the intruder was cornered had potentially been locked, and he couldn’t immediately track down its key. But the door was in fact not locked – and even if it was, officers had a “hooligan” tool that could pry locked doors open, according to the committee’s evidence.
Officers stormed the classroom 77 minutes into the attack and killed the gunman. But by then he had already murdered 21 and wounded 17 others.
Uvalde Police Cowards Of The Uvalde Police Department
Uvalde Consolidated ISD Police Department
Police Officers Names
Police Chief Pete Arredondo, Officer Mike Hernandez, Officer Rubin A. Ruiz, Officer Ruby E. Gonzalez, Officer Miguel R. Hernandez, Officer Cecilia Flores and Officer Adrian Gonnzales.
Uvalde Police Department
Uvalde Police Officers Names
Police Chief Daniel S. Rodriguez, Officer Julian R. Arredondo, Officer Gilberto Banda, Officer James P. Calliham, Officer Eduardo P. Canales, Officer Lee A. Cantu, Officer Braulio Castillo, Officer Ventura Chapa, Officer Sky Lynn Cisnero, Officer Telesforo D. Coronado, Officer Fred F. De La Cruz, Officer Jose A. De La Rosa and Officer Max G. Dorflinger.
Officer Juan M. Hernandez Jr., Officer Ruben Hernandez Jr., Officer Eric M. Herrera, Officer Randy J. Hill, Officer Myles Kinsey, Officer Louis G. Landry Jr, Officer Renato R. Lualemaga, Officer Daniel E. Martinez, Officer Javier Martinez, Officer Jonathan M. Martinez, Officer Juan A. Martinez, Officer Jesus R. Mendoza, Officer Justin F. Mendoza and Officer Ramon Morin Jr.
Officer Veronica D. Orta, Officer Donald M. Page, Officer Mariano C. Pargas Jr, Officer Joshua Perez, Officer Bruce Ramos, Officer Jose A. Rodriguez, Officer Ronald Rodriguez, Officer Daniel L. Ruiz Jr., Officer Bobby P. Ruiz, Officer Ernesto Santos Jr, Officer Juan Saucedo Jr, Officer Hoshi Segura, Officer Wayne D. Seiple, Officer Juan Vargas, Officer Gregory P. Villa, Officer Michael R. Wally, Officer Jessica A. Zamora and Officer Joe M. Zamora.
This Police Officer seems to think it’s funny
Uvalde police officer thought it was fun and game time
This officer is laughing and having a good time
Uvalde Police Officers Make Poor Decisions
Police Uvalde Texas
Uvalde Police Chief Arredondo
Police Chief Pete Arredondo seen on the phone not knowing what to do
Uvalde Police School Shooting Video
Full length school shooting video
Uvalde Police Department Website Reads
“The City of Uvalde Police Department serves the community by protecting citizens and property, preventing crime, enforcing laws, and maintaining order.”
Open Records Requests from the Uvalde Police Department
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texas department of public safety
Uvalde school shooting police did nothing
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Uvalde Police
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