School officials in Uvalde, Texas released text messages, personnel files and shooter records on Monday 2022 attack at Rob Elementary SchoolAfter one year legal battle on public access to materials.
The records also include emails and text messages and emails among top school district officials, which were from at least two school police officers who were on the spot. The release also includes a personnel file of PT Dondondo, the police chief of former Uvalde schools, described as an on——on to law enforcement response.
The release included some handful of text exchange between Aredondo and others which were sent before the shooting. At 9:04 am, the chief asked the officer Adrian Gonzalase “to go to the park with the seniors by 11:30 pm.” At 11:40 am, a lesson was told to a district secretary by a lesson that someone reported the hearing shots outside Rob Elementary.
“They proceeded and closed themselves,” read the lesson to therdondo. At 1:07 pm, a lesson from the Ardondo asked whether a student was injured or rushed to the hospital and asked if the district could raise a “safe situation” in the school. The shooter was killed by law enforcement about 15 minutes ago.
Media organizations, including CBS News and Associated Press, sued the district and county in 2022, to release their records related to large -scale shooting. 19 students and two teachers,
In July, a Texas Appeal Court upheld the lower court verdict that records should be issued.
Eric Gay / AP
Records are not the first glimpse of the public within one of the country’s deadliest collective shoots and a slow law enforcement response has been widely condemned. Last year, city officials in Uvalde released police body camera video and 911 call recording.
Nearly 400 officers waited for more than 70 minutes before facing a gunman in a class filled with dead and injured children and teachers. Many federal and state investigations in response have determined bare cascading problems in law enforcement training, communication, leadership and technology, and questioned whether the authorities have preferred their lives about children and teachers.
Two school district officials have to face criminal allegations for their works that day. Both the former police chief, Ardondo and former officer Adrian Gonzalas have to face several cases of child danger and abandonment. Both men have requested not to be guilty and are scheduled for testing later this year.
They are only two responding officers who have been charged.
The media law chair for Hense Boon, who represented media organizations in the suit, said in a statement on Monday night, “After more than three years after the shooting of Rob Elementary School, Ulad does not claim the community from the release of a long -running public records by the Integrated Independent School district.
“Three years ago, it is too long to wait for truth and transparency that can stop the future tragedies,” Prathar said.