XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.law-enforcement, alt.politics.democrats.d   
   XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh   
   From: stupid-cowards@clintonfoundation.org   
      
   In article    
    wrote:   
      
   Multiple officers were inside Robb Elementary School armed with   
   rifles and at least one ballistic shield by 11:52 a.m. on May   
   24, but they didn't breach a classroom door and take out the   
   gunman who killed 19 children and two adults for nearly an hour,   
   according to documents reviewed by the Austin-American Statesman.   
      
   The new details shed light on the shifting timeline that law   
   enforcement has provided about the response to the third-   
   deadliest school shooting in U.S. history.   
      
   Salvador Ramos, the 18-year-old suspected gunman, walked into   
   the school at 11:33 a.m. then entered a pair of adjoining   
   classrooms and opened fire.   
      
   Three minutes later, 11 officers entered the school. The first   
   officer with a ballistic shield arrived at 11:52 a.m., while two   
   other officers with ballistics shield arrived at 12:03 p.m. and   
   12:05 p.m., according to the Austin American-Statesman.   
      
   As ballistic shields and additional firepower arrived at the   
   scene, some officers were questioning the plan. According to the   
   Texas Tribune, a special agent with the Texas Department of   
   Public Safety arrived about 20 minutes after the shooting   
   started and immediately asked if there were still children in   
   the classrooms. He then reportedly said: "If there is, then they   
   just need to go in."   
      
   Another officer replied that it was unclear if there were any   
   children in the classrooms and the special agent again   
   reiterated the need "to go in there." The special agent was then   
   told that whoever was in charge would determine that, the   
   Tribune reported. The special agent then began to help evacuate   
   other children who were still in the school.   
      
   Texas Department of Public Safety Director Steven McCraw   
   previously said that the incident commander, Uvalde school   
   police chief Pete Arredondo, thought that the situation had   
   transitioned from an active shooter to a barricaded subject, and   
   that there was "time to retrieve the keys and wait for a   
   tactical team with the equipment to go ahead and breach the   
   door."   
      
   After police entered the school, the gunman could be heard   
   firing shots inside the classroom at 11:44 a.m. and 12:21 p.m.,   
   the Statesman reports.   
      
   Several 911 calls were also made from inside the classroom,   
   including at 12:03, 12:10, 12:13, 12:16, 12:19, and 12:36 p.m.   
      
   Eva Mireles, a teacher who died on the way to the hospital after   
   the shooting, called her husband, Uvalde school district police   
   officer Ruben Ruiz, and said that she was wounded.   
      
   "She says she is shot," Ruiz told officers as he entered the   
   school around 11:48 a.m., according to the body camera   
   transcript reviewed by the New York Times.   
      
   A banner hangs at a memorial outside Robb Elementary School on   
   Friday, June 3. (AP/Eric Gay)   
      
   Officials have also said that law enforcement held back while   
   they tried to find a key to open the classroom door, but San   
   Antonio Express-News reported last week that the classroom door   
   was unlocked and no one ever checked the door before breaching   
   it at 12:50 p.m. and taking out the gunman.   
      
   A Halligan bar, an ax-like tool used by firefighters to force   
   open locked doors, was also available if the door had been   
   locked, according to the Texas Tribune.   
      
   Officials offered conflicting information on the timeline in the   
   days after the shooting, but have not held any press conferences   
   for weeks.   
      
   A special House committee investigating the shooting has been   
   questioning law enforcement officials behind closed doors.   
      
   Another committee formed in the Senate will hold a public   
   hearing on Tuesday and Wednesday in which the public and invited   
   speakers will testify on school safety, police training, and   
   social media.   
      
   At the federal level, the Justice Department is also conducting   
   an independent review of law enforcement's response.   
      
   https://www.foxnews.com/us/uvalde-shooting-officers-rifles-   
   ballistic-shield-inside-school-58-minutes   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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