Texas State Police Chief: Uvalde Was 'Abject Failure,' Police Could Have Stopped Gunman in 3 Minutes
"The only thing stopping a hallway of dedicated officers from entering Room 111 and 112 was the on-scene commander who decided to place the lives of officers before the lives of children."

Texas Department of Public Safety Director Steve McCraw testified before state legislators today that the police response to the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, was an "abject failure" and said he strongly believed that the door to the classroom, which police officers waited outside of for more than an hour, was unlocked.
The statements were the strongest condemnations yet by Texas state law enforcement of the police response at Uvalde and further indication that an inexcusable cascade of poor decisions left two classrooms of children and their teachers at the mercy of the gunman.
McCraw called the decision to treat the shooter as a barricaded suspect an "abject failure and antithetical to everything we have learned over the past two decades."
McCraw singled out Uvalde school district police Chief Pete Arredondo, whom he identified as the on-scene commander at the incident: "The only thing stopping a hallway of dedicated officers from entering Room 111 and 112 was the on-scene commander who decided to place the lives of officers before the lives of children."
"The officers had weapons. The children had none," McCraw said. "The officers had body armor. The children had none. The officers had training. The subject had none. One hour, 14 minutes, and 8 seconds. That's how long children waited and the teachers waited in Room 111 to be rescued."
McCraw's testimony comes on the heels of reporting by multiple Texas news outlets that contradict Arredondo's narrative of the May 24 mass shooting that left 19 elementary school students and two teachers dead. Arredondo said in a recent interview with The Texas Tribune that he didn't consider himself to be the on-scene commander and that officers waited outside the door because they were outgunned and lacked breaching tools or keys to open the doors.
However, the Austin American-Statesman and KVUE-TV reviewed hallway footage of the incident and reported that officers arrived with a ballistic shield and rifles 19 minutes after the gunman entered the school. They also had a breaching tool, called a Halligan bar. The Texas Tribune reported that none of the security footage it reviewed shows officers checking the door or attempting to unlock it.
"I have great reasons to believe it was never secured," McCraw testified about the door. "How about trying the door and seeing if it's locked?"
McCraw testified today that police could have stopped the shooter within three minutes.
The reality of the massacre, coming out in dribs and drabs, has moved so far away from the original police narrative that public officials' older comments now read as farcical. Take Texas Gov. Gregg Abbot's comments from May 25, a day after the mass shooting.
"The reality is, as horrible as what happened, it could have been worse," Abbot said. "The reason it was not worse is that law enforcement officials did what they do. They showed amazing courage by running toward gunfire for the singular purpose of trying to save lives. And it is a fact that because of their quick response, getting on the scene of being able to respond to the gunman and eliminating the gunman, they were able to save lives."
Abbot later said he was misled about the events.
As Reason reported Monday, state and local agencies in Texas, ranging from the governor's office to the City of Uvalde, have geared up to fight the scores of public records requests filed by media outlets seeking more information on the police response to the shooting.
McCraw testified that the police response at Uvalde "set our profession back a decade." If agencies keep trying to shift blame and bury the truth about that failure, they won't have a reputation left to salvage.
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I don't know how this guy is still working. He did absolutely nothing correct. If he wasn't the on site commander, than who was? Did they not even take the basic step of establishing a chain of command? Fuck, keystone cops at their best. I normally give the police some benefit of the doubt, but these asshats don't deserve any. Can this asshole be charged with dereliction of duty? Manslaughter? Etc?
I'll be honest, my one and only interaction with police in a non-traffic-ticket situation left me with heavily mixed feelings.
Short story -- neighbor lady flipped out, pulled a gun (was threatening suicide but also waiving it at my roommate), then barricaded herself inside. We called 911 and all of the police showed up.
Many of them were great. Smart, good tactics, really tried to not kill the lady (I'd not have shed a tear, this woman had said some horrific things about a lot of us by this point). But the guy who was talking to me about what was happening was... a dick. Typical cop thing, kept interrupting, kept asking questions in that accusatory cop fashion. They teach this to "control the conversation" but it's really bad people skills.
For example, they were going to have to find her and pull her out. I wanted to give them an idea what they were going in to. A map of the house, where the doors were she could have gone through, which one we locked, which key opened it if they wanted to go through, where the basement door was, etc. The dude kept barking at me, what's this room, why'd you lock that? why would you think she's in the basement? I mean, they were things to know, but ... he never got good answers because he'd bark another before the first answer was done. He never even got a good map. Why didn't he just have me draw a floor plan? Let me tell him what was what? Then ask those questions.
I really believe modern police training is just plain wrong for a lot of things. Too aggressive, too confrontational, etc. The older guy (20 year veteran, plus some time in a different city's department) I went to after that guy pissed me of got the info for them. He let me draw a map and asked me very good and reasonable questions, and as a result they were able to do their job after that, but the one 2 years out of the academy was an asshole and incapable of a basic interview. Because that's how they teach cops to interact in the academy.
Typical cop thing, kept interrupting, kept asking questions in that accusatory cop fashion.
I hate that, by the way. Have dealt with a lot of police which do that. Ask a question, then repeatedly interrupt your answer, then demand and answer to the question, rinse, repeat.
My favorite is "Why are you defensive?"
This is why you don't talk to the police. They want you frustrated and saying the wrong thing and will pester you until you slip up. Then when you get annoyed at them they ask "Why are you being defensive?"
I get trying to sweat a perp or whatever they say on CSI shows. But, for fuck's sake, we were literally trying to get this person out of there, alive, safe, and to a hospital where they could get her stabilized and back on her meds. And we didn't want the police people in harm's way.
I mean, she had pissed me off enough I did ask the one with the beanbag gun to pop her a couple of times for me, but that was after they pulled her out alive and she was headed to the psych ward.
I've had some good interactions and some bad. The worst was Kootenai County Sheriff's deputies, but they had a reputation, especially if you were young, male and from the Rez, which I checked all three boxes at the time. They and the Coeur d'Alene PD actually were cited for their behavior and from what I've experienced with the CDAPD since, they've improved. Not sure about the Sheriff's department. Benewah Sheriff's Deputies were almost always professionals, as were the St. Maries PD and overall the Idaho State Police seem fairly professional. The local sheriff's deputies in the county I currently live in have been very helpful the few times I interacted with them. But that could be because I'm a fairly well respected member of the community and I always try and act professional when I work with them. My one interaction with Montana Highway Patrol was when I hit a deer. We have a salvage law and he printed up the salvage permit for me and helped me load the deer, even though he didn't have to.
Any non-bootlicker knows the thin blue line trope is horse shit. In reality, as this horrific incident has shown, the thin blue line is the line they draw regarding whose lives are worth saving - and if you aren't wearing a badge then they ain't saving shit.
Fat Blue LIE !
They are more brain damaged and useless than me !
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No, the one pushing 90 years old eating Applesnacks.
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/impact-soros-funded-district-attorneys
Fuck you and your twitter or zerohedge "sources". Eat shit and die.
Wow, youre more brain damaged than I am !
Overtly Nazi site says overtly Nazi nonsense. Not a shock.
There will be two types of responses to this; those who want to ban weapons [in the belief that it will somehow make their lives safer] and those who believe self defense starts with you.
Regardless, cops are at least minutes away [19 in this case] while seconds literally count; but even when they get there you may still be screwed if you are counting on them to save your ass.
I remember after the Aurora shooting some police chief was on tv and when asked what if a patron had a gun and been able to stop him sooner and his response was that was his biggest fear a civilian with a gun…I was thinking really mine would be for my family and I to be in a situation like that without a gun or at least someone else with a gun.
Oh and for those who would say if he had been stopped from buying a gun…he also had a car full of gas bombs as well. Not sure but I think I would take a bullet over being burned to death.
What's fascinating to me is we're going to get more gun control because the state is admitting that they're not going to protect you from bad actors.
I am sympathetic to this article's views:
https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/john-cornyns-gun-bill-looks-like-a-disaster/
Basically, not only does the changes going through Congress have questionable efficacy, it also opens up new lines of gun grabbing sophistry.
They going after bullets now
How could it be an "abject failure"? Didn't every single one of those valiant officers get home safe that night? Sounds like a rip-roaring success to me.
(do I really have to add a *sarc tag?)
When the shooter us at the door, the cops are 12 bodies away.
Being a criminal, I dont much care for cops anyway.
Heroes don't get pensions.
He culd have been stopped outside the building, but the officer was worried about hitting kids in the background behind the guy heading toward a aschool with a gun. I've read that the school district police chief ditched his radio outside the building because the antenna was getting in the way.
"his radio outside the building because the antenna was getting in the way."
Got in the way of holding DONUTS.
What people don't understand is that the cops did exactly what they are trained to do. Go home safe. Putting their own safety at risk is a violation of the zero tolerance policy for officer harm. Heroes get fired.
Trained? Parasites do what they are ordered to do by Goonion and Gubment, in that order. Ask yourself: How much would YOU hire those looters for? Every government school is a deathtrap for children. This will continue for so long as nonmystical private schools are taxed and regulated out of existence like so many non-collectivist, unsubsidized, libertarian parties.
Why didn't they just kick the door open, shoot the lock, break windows (if there were any; I do not know, but it's hard for me to imagine any school room without windows)? They're so goddam eager to give no notice for a 3am drug raid, just POLICE kick shoot.
Just kick and shoot? You are joking I hope, because the cops had no knowledge of what the shooter looked like, how many shooters were in the room, where the shooter(s) was located in the room, etc. All critical details that the cops could have obtained in real-time from any of the students inside the room who were on the phone with 911; except someone decided to not connect the callers from inside the room with the cops in the hall.
Well, the cop who did nothing outside knew it was one guy, and he was a lot taller than the poor kids. So worst case was maybe shooting the teacher.
General training, and self-survival, would lead me to shoot the one with a gun first.
There actually can be class rooms in the center of a large structure that don't have windows. It's rare but I've seen this in several different schools
"The officers had weapons. The children had none," ... This--plus teaching the initiation of force--is why male berserkers invariably choose government schools as wedge incidents convenient for actors interested in weakening the Second Amendment. Government has no legitimate power to facilitate the brainwashing of children--at least not in These States. Schoolgirls exercising full Second Amendment rights are a constitutional alternative to male collective shooter massacres. Privatizing the schools is another.
They had shooter training two months before yet waited. The kid had $9,000 worth of gear. The outer door didn't automatically lock. The classroom doors didn't automatically lock. A lot of coincidences. Another false flag?
Yeah, where did this 18 year old with a minimum wage job get the cash for this stuff? Has anyone said yet?
The simple reality is that police are stupid, lazy, and racist. If you want things to be otherwise, abolish QI.
This is the real problem with mass transit.
There is always a bus around to throw someone under.
Abbot later said he was misled about the events.
No doubt. Maybe next time they'll pause before the reflexive LEO adoration is dribbling down their chins.