Texas Law Enforcement Is Aggressively Fighting Public Records Requests About the Uvalde Mass Shooting
Transparency advocates say police could invoke a notorious loophole that allows them to hide records of deaths in custody and police killings.

In the aftermath of the school shooting in Uvalde Texas, news outlets around the country have filed scores of public records requests trying to uncover more information about the delayed police response, but law enforcement agencies are fighting to reject those requests.
Last week, a law firm representing the city of Uvalde sent a letter to the Texas Attorney General's Office asking it to rule on whether the city can cite an avalanche of exemptions—52, according to the Associated Press—that it believes should allow it to deny public records requests from numerous media organizations related to the May shooting that left 19 students and two teachers dead.
Some records have come out. The New York Times, for instance, received transcripts of body camera footage, but the majority of the records requests filed by local and national media are in limbo as agencies ask Ken Paxton's office to review them. The Texas Tribune and ProPublica report that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott's office, the Texas Department of Public Safety, and the U.S. Marshals Service are also requesting rulings from Paxton's office. These reviews are required for any non-routine rejection of a records request in Texas.
The most likely reason that the release of public records from the shooting will be delayed is the several ongoing police investigations, a commonly cited reason for withholding records. However, Vice reported that the Texas Department of Public Safety also argued that the records sought by the news outlet could also be used by criminals to identify "weaknesses" in police tactics and "would provide criminals with invaluable information concerning Department techniques used to investigate and detect activities of suspected criminal elements."
Texas transparency activists also say police could invoke the so-called "dead suspect loophole," a provision in Texas' public records law that allows law enforcement to withhold records on cases that didn't result in a conviction.
The statute was supposed to protect the privacy of the wrongfully accused and innocent, but it is also frequently invoked by Texas law enforcement to hide records of deaths in police custody. A 2018 Reason investigation found at least 81 cases where police departments cited the loophole to withhold records of deaths in police custody from reporters, lawyers, and family members of the deceased.
"It's being misused by many law enforcement agencies across the state to try to hide what really happened when someone dies in custody or when a suspect is killed on-site," says Kelley Shannon, executive director of the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas.
State Rep. Joe Moody, a Democrat, has introduced bills over the past several years to close the loophole.
"They could make that decision; they shouldn't have that choice," Moody told NPR of the possibility of the loophole being used to withhold records about the Uvalde mass shooting. "To understand what our government is doing should not be that difficult—and right now it is very difficult."
All of Moody's bills to close the loophole died following opposition from a powerful police lobby, the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas (CLEAT), which argued that the legislation was "pushed by anti-police groups who want access to the information so they can post it on social media and trash officers who are involved in high profile incidents."
However, the involvement of federal investigators will offer a workaround if Texas agencies withhold records. Because the Department of Justice is also investigating the Uvalde shooting, records that it gathers will be subject to the federal Freedom of Information Act, which doesn't include the loophole.
In any case, there is nothing stopping local and state agencies from voluntarily releasing records on the shooting, a step that would be welcomed after the confusing, contradictory, and false narratives offered by public officials in the aftermath of the shooting. The public was initially told that the Uvalde shooter fought his way through a school resource officer and two other police officers before barricading himself in a classroom. "Barricaded" turned out to mean that the gunman locked the door. Now news outlets are reporting that police never checked to see if the door was locked during the hour or so that they waited to breach the classroom.
"It would be in the best interest of law enforcement, state officials, the community, the state of Texas, the nation, for them to start releasing more information. There's this whole anti-transparency veil happening with the Uvalde case. Everybody wants to know more, wants to know what happened and how it happened, so this can be prevented in the future," Shannon said. "Even if they don't have to release it, they should be releasing it."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Does anyone trust that gun control laws will be enforced competently, or in an even-handed manner?
When have they ever lied before?
Hunter Biden agrees.
I even have made $30,030 just in five weeks straightforwardly working part-time from my apartment. (res-32) Immediately when I've lost my last business, I was exhausted and luckily I found this top online task & with this I am in a position to obtain thousands directly through my home. Everybody is able to get this best career & can gain more dollars on-line going this article.
.
>>>> https://oldprofits.blogspot.com/
Every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday.
Every day ending in "y".
Those who fight such requests need to be fired, yesterday. That is disgusting as well as criminal behavior. You
Ask any black americans who lived through Jim Crow era in the south....
OK, so who left the emergerncy exit unlocked/open? Where are the school security videos of the shooter trying all of the emrgency exits before finding one that was unlocked?? All emergency exits have security cameras aimed at the door and the approach to the door. Those doors do not have a latch on the outside and can only be opened from the insie by a pushbar. There is a special key that can be used to pull the latch back to allow for deliveries. I also would like to know why the police were ordered by the police chief to wait for an hour+. Who told the police chief to order the stand down??
I love it that even cops won’t talk to the cops when they’re in trouble.
"They could make that decision; they shouldn't have that choice,"
He said about the January 6 committee's refusal to give any republican anything?
He’s a state legislator with no dog in the 1/6 hunt. Why should he say anything about it?
19 children died on his watch. Why is he still chief?
Day ain’t over yet.
Given the way things are going, I’m guessing there will be a huge run on torches and pitchforks across the country very soon.
Those motherfuckers should be tarred and feathered and run out of town.
We need more tar and feathering in this society.
the primary reason "thin blue line" types support the cops is because they (thinblueliners) believe the main purpose of the cops is to provide PROTECTION to innocent citizens from violent crime.
That's the primary thing they are supposed to do.
Any cop who fails to do that in the situation like Uvalde should be fired, have his pension canceled, and be subject to civil lawsuits.
Thank God it's only small town police who hold back records to cover up their wrongdoing
"Weaknesses..." Like, say, being a bunch of cowards who would rather stand around with their thumbs up their asses for over an hour instead of doing their fucking jobs? Are those the "weaknesses" they're concerned about?
Pretty clear that any other nutjob who wants to shoot up a school already knows they can completely disregard the cops in their planning.
-jcr
No, like black ops using those details for their next missions. No one ever wonder what the Marshals were doing there? Everyone was just obeying orders.
I even have made $30,030 just in five weeks straightforwardly working part-time from my apartment. (res-32) Immediately when I've lost my last business, I was exhausted and luckily I found this top online task & with this I am in a position to obtain thousands directly through my home. Everybody is able to get this best career & can gain more dollars on-line going this Website... http://www.profit97.com/
Feds need to come in with a warrant and secure everything single thing. By now if the outside door didn't lock it was already fixed.
Yes, those paragons of virtue... the Feds
The feds? This country lives in fantasy land.
"would provide criminals with invaluable information concerning Department techniques..."
Standing about jaw jacking while a mass murder is taking place on the other side of a door is a department technique? I suppose the invaluable information is to close the door before you start shooting so the cops will have something to mentally masturbate over.
Anyone who thinks this wasn’t by design is a complete dupe that deserves what’s coming down the pipeline.
Picture out this morning showing LEOs in the school with M4s and ballistic shields at T+19. They waited 59 more minutes before "breaching" the "barricaded" classroom.
CB
I would think that if you were going to protect the falsely accused and the innocent, it would make sense to free up as much information about police incidents as possible.
That way, you could then use this information to corroborate against the larger context of information on the accused and the setting to see if the police clains about the accused are correct.
This "dead suspect loophole" on public records sounds like it's an invitation to all kinds of corrupt behavior. Ditto with "personnel matters" of Government workers.