Routing of emergency-911 calls questioned in Texas school massacre
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[June 03, 2022]
By Brad Brooks and Steve Gorman
LUBBOCK, Texas (Reuters) - Emergency-911
calls from children hiding from the gunman who killed 21 people inside a
Texas elementary school were not routed to the on-scene police commander
who waited nearly an hour before officers moved in to end the siege, a
state senator said on Thursday.
Roland Gutierrez, a Democrat whose constituency includes Uvalde, Texas,
the town 80 miles west of San Antonio where last week's shooting
occurred, said the lapse in how 911 calls were transmitted was part of a
larger "system failure" that is still just coming to light.
"We need transparency, and that hasn't happened here," Gutierrez told a
news conference nine days after last Tuesday's massacre at Robb
Elementary School, which ranks as the deadliest U.S. school shooting in
a decade and follows a string of mass shootings elsewhere across Texas
in recent years.
The Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) disclosed last week that as
many as 19 officers from various local law enforcement agencies stood
outside the classroom occupied by the Uvalde gunman for more than 45
minutes before a U.S. Border Patrol-led tactical squad stormed in and
killed the shooter.
DPS officials said the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District's
own police chief had assumed command of the incident and made the
decision to hold off on sending officers in to neutralize the gunman,
apparently believing the immediate threat to students inside had abated
after an initial flurry of gunfire from inside.
But even as the officers waited in a hallway outside the classroom, at
least two fourth-grade girls cowering inside placed frantic, whispered
phone calls to local emergency-911 dispatchers pleading for police to
send help, according to DPS.
Gutierrez said the Texas Commission on State Emergency Communications,
an agency that monitors the 911 system, told his office that all such
calls placed in Uvalde are routed to the Uvalde Police Department only,
not the school district's police department.
That means the on-scene commander at the time of the
shooting, Pete Arredondo, who is chief of the school district's separate
police force, was not immediately privy to the calls from school
children under attack, Gutierrez said.
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Mourners pay their respects at a memorial for the 21 killed in the
mass shooting at Robb Elementary School, in the Uvalde Town Square
in Uvalde, Texas on June 1, 2022. Lucas Boland/USA TODAY NETWORK via
REUTERS
Gutierrez acknowledged he could not rule out whether information
about the 911 calls in question were relayed from Uvalde police to
Arredondo in real time, even though the dispatch center was not
directing the calls to Arredondo's agency.
The head of DPS, state police Colonel Steven McGraw, has said
Arredondo made "the wrong decision" by waiting almost an hour to
breach the classroom, a move at odds with law enforcement doctrine
requiring officers to pursue and confront an active shooter without
delay.
Gutierrez said "every law enforcement unit that was at that school"
bears some responsibility for what happened.
The state senator also criticized Governor Greg Abbott, a
Republican, for declining to call the state legislature back into a
special session to address "a problem that is staring him square in
the face."
Gutierrez said there were signs of growing willingness, even within
a Republican Party long resistant to tougher gun laws, to consider
such measures as raising the legal age for purchasing rifles from 18
to 21.
The murder weapon used in Uvalde, an AR 15-style semiautomatic
rifle, was legally purchased by the shooter on his 18th birthday,
and he later bought a second rifle and hundreds of rounds of
ammunition, according to police.
Abbott on Wednesday called instead for the formation of special
committees to examine school safety, mental health and police
training and to recommend policy changes for the legislature and
governor's office to adopt.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Lubbock, Texas; Writing and additional
reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Chris Reese)
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