Current:Home > StocksTragic 911 calls, body camera footage from Uvalde, Texas school shooting released -TradeStation
Tragic 911 calls, body camera footage from Uvalde, Texas school shooting released
View
Date:2025-04-13 10:10:04
The city of Uvalde, Texas, has released a trove of records from the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in May 2022, marking the largest and most substantial disclosure of documents since that day.
The records include body camera footage, dashcam video, 911 and non-emergency calls, text messages and other redacted documents. The release comes as part of the resolution of a legal case brought by a coalition of media outlets, including the Austin American-Statesman, part of the USA TODAY Network, and its parent company, Gannett.
'FAILURE':DOJ's scathing Uvalde school shooting report criticizes law enforcement response
Body cameras worn by officers show the chaos at the school as the shooting scene unfolded. One piece of footage shows several officers cautiously approaching the school.
"Watch windows! Watch windows," one officer says. When notified that the gunman was armed with an "AR," short for the semiautomatic AR-15, the officers responds with a single expletive.
The bloodbath inside the classrooms of Uvalde's Robb Elementary School on May 24, 2022, is worst mass shooting at an educational institution in Texas history. The gunman armed with a semiautomatic rifle killed 19 fourth graders and two of their teachers before being taken out by officers more than an hour after the terror inside the building began.
Release includes 911 calls from teacher, shooter's uncle
The records include more than a dozen calls to 911, including in the earliest moments of the shooting.
At 11:33 a.m., a man screams to an operator: "He's inside the school! Oh my God in the name of Jesus, he's inside the school shooting at the kids."
In a separate call, a teacher inside Robb Elementary, who remained on the line with a 911 operator for 28 minutes after dialing in at 11:36 a.m., remains silent for most of the call but occasionally whispers. At one point her voice cracks and she cries: "I'm scared. They are banging at my door."
The 911 calls also come from a man who identified himself as the shooter's uncle.
He calls at 12:57 – just minutes after a SWAT team breached the classroom and killed the gunman – expressing a desire to speak to his nephew. He explains to the operator that sometimes the man will listen to him.
"Oh my God, please don't do nothing stupid," he says.
"I think he is shooting kids," the uncle says. "Why did you do this? Why?"
News organizations still pushing for release of more records
The Texas Department of Public Safety is still facing a lawsuit from 14 news organizations, including the American-Statesman, that requests records from the shooting, including footage from the scene and internal investigations.
The department has not released the records despite a judge ruling in the news organizations’ favor in March. The agency cites objections from Uvalde County District Attorney Christina Mitchell.
In June, a state district judge in Uvalde County ordered the Uvalde school district and sheriff's office to release records related to the shooting to news outlets, but the records have not yet been made available. The records' release is pending while the matter is under appeal.
"We're thankful the city of Uvalde is taking this step toward transparency," attorney Laura Prather, who represented the coalition, said Saturday. "Transparency is necessary to help Uvalde heal and allow us to all understand what happened and learn how to prevent future tragedies."
Law enforcement agencies that converged on Robb Elementary after the shooting began have been under withering criticism for waiting 77 minutes to confront the gunman. Surveillance video footage first obtained by the American-Statesman and the Austin ABC affiliate KVUE nearly seven months after the carnage shows in excruciating detail dozens of heavily armed and body-armor-clad officers from local, state and federal agencies in helmets walking back and forth in the hallway.
Some left the camera's frame and then reappeared. Others trained their weapons toward the classroom, talked, made cellphone calls, sent texts and looked at floor plans but did not enter or attempt to enter the classrooms.
Even after hearing at least four additional shots from the classrooms 45 minutes after police arrived on the scene, the officers waited.
veryGood! (621)
Related
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Tina Fey says she and work 'wife' Amy Poehler still watch 'SNL' together
- Police are searching for a suspect who shot a man to death at a Starbucks in southwestern Japan
- 4 killed, 1 injured in hot air balloon crash south of Phoenix
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Men who say they were abused by a Japanese boy band producer criticize the company’s response
- This photo shows the moment Maine’s record high tide washed away more than 100-year-old fishing shacks
- New York governor says Bills game won't be postponed again; Steelers en route to Buffalo
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Jim Harbaugh to interview for Los Angeles Chargers' coaching vacancy this week
Ranking
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Yemen Houthi rebels fire missile at US warship in Red Sea in first attack after American-led strikes
- No joke: Feds are banning humorous electronic messages on highways
- Texas jeweler and dog killed in targeted hit involving son, daughter-in-law
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- How the Disappearance of Connecticut Mom Jennifer Dulos Turned Into a Murder Case
- How the Bizarre Cult of Mother God Ended With Amy Carlson's Mummified Corpse
- Hamas fights with a patchwork of weapons built by Iran, China, Russia and North Korea
Recommendation
Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
Austin is released from hospital after complications from prostate cancer surgery he kept secret
Hamas fights with a patchwork of weapons built by Iran, China, Russia and North Korea
District attorney defends the qualifications of a prosecutor hired in Trump’s Georgia election case
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
Ruling-party candidate Lai Ching-te wins Taiwan's presidential election
Tina Fey says she and work 'wife' Amy Poehler still watch 'SNL' together
New Hampshire firefighters battle massive blaze after multiple oil tankers catch fire