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In the days after the massacre, the narrative of what happened at Robb Elementary School changed. Here’s what we know now.

Since 19 children and two teachers were massacred in Uvalde, Texas, authorities have repeatedly changed their story on what happened before, during and after the bloody siege in two adjoining classrooms.

The May 24 slaughter at Robb Elementary School marked at least the 30th shooting at a K-12 school (kindergarten through high school) so far this year and the deadliest school shooting in nearly a decade.

Now, mourners are tormented by shifting police narratives and the horror of knowing victims were trapped with a gunman for more than an hour — despite repeated 911 calls for help from inside the classrooms.

Here are some of the key details that have changed since the deadly rampage:

  • Gunman outside school

  • Gunman entering school

  • Posting

    online

  • Time to

    stop shooter

  • Authorities entering classroom

  • Police chief cooperation

cat1

Did the gunman encounter anyone outside the school?

From Facebook

Then He “engaged” with a school police officer

Authorities initially said that after the gunman shot his grandmother and crashed a truck in a ditch near Robb Elementary School, a school resource officer encountered the suspect and “engaged” him before he entered the school.

“Unfortunately, he was able to enter the premises, and then from there that’s when he entered several classrooms and started shooting his firearm,” Texas Department of Public Safety Sgt. Erick Estrada said on May 24.

Now He “walked in unobstructed”

One day after the shooting, Texas DPS Regional Director Victor Escalon said that when the gunman reached the school, he “walked in unobstructed initially.”

“So from the grandmother’s house, to the (ditch), to the school, into the school, he was not confronted by anybody,” Escalon said.

On May 27, Texas DPS Director Col. Steven McCraw said no school resource officer was at Robb Elementary when the gunman arrived on the campus.

“The (Uvalde) Consolidated Independent School District has six officers, and they didn’t have one posted at that location,” McCraw said.

He also said no school resource officer confronted the gunman before he entered the school — though “it was certainly stated in preliminary interviews.” He said a school district police officer did hear a 911 call about a man with a gun. The officer drove to Robb Elementary and sped to the back of the school to a person he thought was the suspect. But that person turned out to be a teacher.

“In doing so, (the school resource officer) drove right by the suspect, who was hunkered down behind a vehicle, where he began shooting at the school” before entering, McCraw said.

cat2

How did the gunman enter the school?

Then He entered a door propped open by a teacher

On the morning of the shooting, a teacher left a door to the school propped open, McCraw said on May 27.

“That back door was propped open. It wasn’t supposed to be propped open; it was supposed to be locked,” McCraw said three days after the shooting. “So that was an access point that the subject used.”

Now The teacher closed the door, but it didn’t lock

On May 31, Texas DPS spokesperson Travis Considine told The Associated Press that a teacher propped the door open, but then closed it once she realized a shooter was on campus. But the door did not lock.

A DPS press secretary confirmed to CNN that the AP report was accurate.

cat3

Did the killer post his plans online?

Then He posted messages on Facebook

On May 25, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott told reporters the gunman shared his plans on Facebook about 30 minutes before the massacre started.

Abbott said the gunman wrote the following three messages and described them as posts:

“I’m going to shoot my grandmother.”

“I shot my grandmother.”

“I’m going to shoot an elementary school.”

Now He sent private messages, not Facebook posts

Shortly after Abbott’s comments, a spokesperson for Meta — the parent company of Facebook — said the messages were “private one-to-one text messages that were discovered after the terrible tragedy occurred,” and were not public Facebook posts.

On May 27, DPS Director McCraw told reporters he wanted to “correct something that was said early on in the investigation — that he (the gunman) posted on Facebook, publicly, that he was going to shoot his grandmother, and secondly after that that he had shot her, and the third that he was going to go shoot up a school. That did not happen.”

Hours later, Abbott said he was “livid” that he was given wrong information before speaking at the May 25 news conference.

“I wrote down hand notes in detail about what everybody in that room told me in sequential order about what happened. And when I came out here on this stage and told the public what happened, it was a recitation of what people in that room told me — whether it be law enforcement officials or non-law enforcement officials,” Abbott said.

“And as everybody has learned, the information that I was given turned out in part to be inaccurate. And I am absolutely livid about that.”

cat4

How long did it take for law enforcement to kill the shooter?

Pete Luna/Uvalde Leader-News

Then Less than an hour

On Wednesday, May 25, Texas DPS Director McCraw told CNN the shooter was on school grounds for up to an hour before law enforcement entered the classroom he was in and killed him.

“It’s going to be within, like 40 minutes or something, [within] an hour,” he told CNN.

Now More than an hour

On May 27, McCraw said the shooter was on school grounds for over an hour.

McCraw said the gunman entered the school at 11:33 a.m. and was shot and killed by a Border Patrol tactical unit at 12:50 p.m.

In total, about 75 minutes had passed between the time the first law enforcement officers arrived at the school at when Border Patrol tactical agents breached the classroom and killed the shooter.

While the gunman remained in the classroom, parents waited outside the school in mounting frustration, urging law enforcement to take greater action.

Inside the classroom, terrified students called 911 to plead for help while as many as 19 officers stood in the hallway outside the classroom.

cat5

Why didn’t police enter the classroom sooner?

Then The suspect was “pinned down”

In a news conference on May 25, Texas DPS Director McCraw says that officers engaged Ramos while he was in the classroom, and “continued to keep him pinned down in that location” while a tactical team could be assembled to breach the classroom, implying that the decision to keep Ramos confined to one classroom was a strategic tactic.

He later said that the responding officers “saved other kids” by choosing to keep the shooter “pinned down.”

But in an interview with CNN, Lt. Chris Olivarez, another DPS spokesperson, contradicted those statements. He told CNN that officers were at a “disadvantage because the gunman was able to make entry into a classroom [and] barricade himself inside that classroom.”

Now It was “the wrong decision”

On May 27, McCraw said the classroom was not immediately breached because the incident commander thought the scene was a “barricaded subject situation,” not an active shooter situation. He said the incident commander — the Uvalde school district police chief — believed “there was time to retrieve the keys and wait for a tactical team with the equipment to go ahead and breach the door and take on the subject.”

McCraw criticized the decision to not breach the classroom sooner. “From the benefit of hindsight where I’m sitting now, of course it was not the right decision,” he added. “It was the wrong decision, period. There’s no excuse for that.”

The tactical team eventually entered the room using keys from a janitor.

cat7

Is the school district police chief cooperating with state investigators?

Mikala Compton/Austin American-Statesman/USA Today Network

Then Police chief didn’t respond to interview request with the DPS

Uvalde school district Police Chief Pedro “Pete” Arredondo — the incident commander in charge of the law enforcement response during the massacre — did not respond to a request for a follow-up interview, Texas DPS spokesperson Travis Considine told CNN on May 31.

The follow-up interview would be with the Texas Rangers, an investigative branch of the DPS.

Now Arredondo says he’s in touch with authorities

“I am in contact with DPS every day,” Arredondo told CNN on June 1.

The police chief declined to provide additional information, citing the ongoing funerals for the victims.

“We’re going to be respectful to the (families),” Arredondo said. “Whenever this is done and the families quit grieving, then we’ll do that, obviously.”

More than a week after the massacre, many questions remain unanswered.

Authorities have not said whether 911 calls made by children inside the classrooms were relayed to the incident commander while police waited outside.

It’s also not clear how many of the 21 victims who died may have survived had police entered the classroom sooner.

The Texas Rangers are now investigating the massacre and the law enforcement response. The US Justice Department said it is also reviewing the law enforcement response to the deadly rampage.

A Justice Department spokesperson said the review aims “to provide an independent account of law enforcement actions and responses that day, and to identify lessons learned and best practices to help first responders prepare for and respond to active shooter events.”

Source: https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2022/06/us/uvalde-police-narratives-texas-shooting/