logo
Uvalde school shooting: Where things stand 3 years later

Uvalde school shooting: Where things stand 3 years later

Yahoo25-05-2025
The Brief
19 students and two teachers were killed in the Robb Elementary School shooting on May 24, 2022.
A candlelight vigil will be held in Uvalde on Saturday night.
Former Uvalde CISD police chief Pete Arredondo and officer Adrian Gonzales are expected to face trial later this year.
UVALDE, Texas - Saturday marks 3 years since the tragic shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde.
On May 24, 2022, 19 children and two teachers were killed when an 18-year-old gunman entered the school's campus and opened fire inside a fourth grade classroom.
19 Robb Elementary students were killed in the shooting.
Xavier Javier Lopez, 10
Amerie Jo Garza, 10
Uziyah Garcia, 8
Rojelio Torres, 10
Annabell Guadalupe Rodriguez, 10
Nevaeh Bravo, 10
Makenna Lee Elrod, 10
Eliahana 'Elijah Cruz' Torres, 10
Eliana 'Ellie' Garcia, 9
Alithia Ramirez, 10
Jacklyn "Jackie" Cazares, 9
Jayce Carmelo Luevanos, 10
Jailah Nicole Silguero, 11
Jose Flores Jr, 10
Alexandria "Lexi" Aniyah Rubio, 10
Maite Yuleana Rodriguez, 10
Tess "Tessy" Marie Mata, 10
Maranda Gail Mathis, 11
Layla Salazar, 10
Fourth-grade co-teachers 48-year-old Irma Garcia and 44-year-old Eva Mireles were also killed. Family members said at the time both died trying to protect their students.
What's next
A public candlelight vigil, organized by family members of the victims, will be held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Uvalde Amphitheatre.
A private event will be held earlier in the night.
In 2024, the Department of Justice released a nearly 600-page report detailing the 'cascading failures' by law enforcement on May 24, 2022.
Nearly 400 law enforcement officials responded to the campus, but waited for 77 minutes before entering the classroom and confronting the 18-year-old shooter.
The police response included nearly 150 U.S. Border Patrol agents and 91 state police officials, as well as school and city police. While dozens of officers stood in the hallway trying to figure out what to do, students inside the classroom called 911 on cellphones, begging for help, and desperate parents who had gathered outside the building pleaded with officers to go in. A tactical team eventually entered the classroom and killed the shooter.
The report talked about the vast array of problems from failed communication and leadership, to the inadequate training and technology used by police.
A private investigator hired by the city cleared Uvalde city police of missteps.
Austin-based investigator Jesse Prado presented his findings in March 2024.
Prado stated the department did not commit any wrongdoing or violate any policy.
Former Uvalde CISD Police Chief Pete Arredondo and school police officer Adrian Gonzales are the only two members of law enforcement to face charges in connection to the shooting.
Arredondo and Gonzales were both indicted in July 2024 on multiple counts of child endangerment.
Both have pleaded not guilty.
Arrendondo, the incident commander, has said he believes he was "scapegoated" for his role in the response.
In December, a Texas judge refused to throw out the criminal charges against the former school police chief.
Both Arrendondo and Gonzales are scheduled to go to trial in October, according to the Associated Press.
This April, Uvalde City Council unanimously approved a settlement with families affected by the Robb Elementary School shooting.
The passage came 11 months after the families announced they agreed to a $2 million settlement with the city.
Attorneys representing the 19 families of the victims said at the time they were accepting the city insurance payment because the families did not want to hurt the financial status of the city they live in.
As a part of the agreement, city leaders promised higher standards and "enhanced training" for current and future police. The city will also build a memorial to the victims and offer resources to support mental health.
The city will also pay for the upkeep of the children's graves.
A bill dubbed the 'Uvalde Strong Act' passed the Texas Legislature earlier this week.
Texas House Rep. Don McLaughlin, who was mayor of Uvalde at the time of the attack and has been actively seeking change to law enforcement policy since, says the bill would correct problems with training that led to police hesitancy in the shooting.
The bill would require officers and school officials to meet annually for active shooter response plan development. It also increases officer training specifically for school shooter responses at primary and secondary school campuses.
Gov. Greg Abbott is expected to sign the bill into law.
The Source
Information in this article comes from past FOX reporting, Uvalde County court records, the Texas Legislature and the Department of Justice.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hundreds Arrested At Protest in Defiance of Anti-Terror Law
Hundreds Arrested At Protest in Defiance of Anti-Terror Law

Time​ Magazine

time2 minutes ago

  • Time​ Magazine

Hundreds Arrested At Protest in Defiance of Anti-Terror Law

Police in London arrested at least 365 protesters on Saturday who defied an anti-terror law by holding placards expressing support for a recently banned pro-Palestinian group. Hundreds of demonstrators gathered outside the British Parliament to hold signs reading "I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action," in what they said was a protest for freedom of expression. By doing so, the protesters violated a law passed by the British Parliament in early July that classified Palestine Action as a terror organization and made it illegal for anyone to publicly show support for it. The legislation was passed in response to an incident in which activists from the group broke into a Royal Air Force base and vandalized two tanker aircraft in protest against the United Kingdom's support for Israel, and against Israel's ongoing war in Gaza. "Within this crowd a significant number of people are displaying placards expressing support for Palestine Action, which is a proscribed group," the Metropolitan Police Service said on X. "Officers have moved in and are making arrests." Police later said they had arrested 365 people for 'supporting a proscribed organization.' Membership of, or support for, Palestine Action is a criminal offence punishable by up to 14 years in prison under the Terrorism Act 2000. Saturday's demonstration was organized by a group called Defend Our Juries, which called for people to attend the protest with signs expressing support for Palestine Action in a demonstration of civil disobedience. "Once the meaning of 'terrorism' is separated from campaigns of violence against a civilian population, and extended to include those causing economic damage or embarrassment to the rich, the powerful and the criminal, then the right to freedom of expression has no meaning and democracy is dead," the group said on its website. Rights group Amnesty International described the arrests as 'deeply concerning.' It has previously criticized the law as 'excessively broad and vaguely worded and a threat to freedom of expression.' What is Palestine Action? Palestine Action was established in 2020 and claims to take 'aim at the infrastructure that sustains the Israeli occupation,' according to co-founder Huda Ammori. The group has frequently targeted Elbit Systems, an Israel-based defense contractor that earlier this year signed a contract with the Israeli government worth $275 million. Palestine Action staged break-ins at Elbit sites across the U.K. last year in the city of Bristol, and at a factory in the county of Kent, where around £1 million ($1.33 million) worth of property was reportedly destroyed. The group was proscribed as a terrorist group under the 2000 Terrorism Act by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper on July 5, after members of the group broke into a Royal Air Force base in Oxfordshire on June 20, spray painting two Voyager jets and damaging them with crowbars. The British Government said that the group 'has orchestrated a nationwide campaign of direct criminal action against businesses and institutions' and that it 'prepares for, promotes, and encourages terrorism.' 'Proscription will enable law enforcement to effectively disrupt Palestine Action,' the government order read, meaning that support for the group is now deemed a criminal offence punishable by up to 14 years in prison. Palestine Action was proscribed alongside two groups described as 'white-supremacist' movements, the Maniacs Murder Cult and the Russian Imperial Movement. The Israel-Hamas war was triggered after Hamas launched a terror attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing over 1,200 people and taking around 250 hostages. Over 61,000 Palestinians have been killed since the start of the war, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. In the absence of independent monitoring on the ground, the ministry is the primary source for casualty data relied upon by humanitarian groups, journalists, and international bodies. Its figures do not differentiate between civilians and combatants and cannot be independently verified by TIME. The humanitarian toll in Gaza continues to rise, after a U.N.-backed food security body warned last week that the 'worst case famine scenario' is unfolding. 'Mounting evidence shows that widespread starvation, malnutrition, and disease are driving a rise in hunger-related deaths,' the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) reported on July 29. At least 197 people have now died from mass hunger, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. — Additional reporting by Callum Sutherland

CRIME HUNTER: New docuseries shines light on horrific Yogurt Shop Murders
CRIME HUNTER: New docuseries shines light on horrific Yogurt Shop Murders

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

CRIME HUNTER: New docuseries shines light on horrific Yogurt Shop Murders

Four kids making a couple extra bucks with part-time jobs at a frozen yogurt joint. Not exactly putting themselves in harm's way, but that is exactly what they were. On Friday, Dec. 6, 1991, Eliza Thomas, 17, Amy Ayers, 13, and sisters Jennifer Harbison, 17, and Sarah Harbison, 15, were shot to death during a botched heist at I Can't Believe It's Yogurt! in Austin, Texas. After the vile killers shot the girls, they set their bodies ablaze. The killers were never caught, and now HBO is offering a new four-part docuseries, The Yogurt Shop Murders. It premiered on Aug. 3. The series pulls back the curtain on the families, cops and community who were shaken to their core by the horrific crimes and the agonizing decades since. It was store manager Reese Price who identified the victims. She volunteered for the macabre duty so the girls' families wouldn't have to endure the horrific sight. 'There wasn't anything there to identify,' Price told series producers. 'Fire is very destructive. It's not forgiving.' The series shows footage of the shop on the night of the murders as the girls' date with monsters unfolds in real time. Director Margaret Brown told USA Today that people who have never spoken publicly before talk to producers. 'These people went through something so specifically awful, but I do think there's something in that for everyone,' Brown said. 'We're all going to experience pain, and I felt like for me, this was a way to look at this fascinating case, at the same time an exploration of how do people deal with something this hard, (and) what can we learn from that?' In the wake of the horrendous slayings, a massive media campaign was unleashed in Austin and beyond, desperately appealing for information on the killers. Billboards with chilling photos of the girls dotted the landscape 'A lot of my friends who are crime reporters said this is the most interesting crime that exists,' Brown told the newspaper. 'There's not one with more rabbit holes. This is the mother ship of interesting crime.' Locals and true crime buffs are obsessed with the vexing case that has been passed from detective to detective as investigators retired over the three-decade course of the investigation. The latest investigator is Det. Dan Jackson, who took stewardship of the thick, cold case file in 2022. It was the first case he was assigned on his first day with the cold case unit. 'It's such a huge case,' Jackson said. 'I sort of knew at that point I would be with it forever.' The detective offers several theories as to why the case was never closed. For starters, the blaze that engulfed the shop and bodies wiped out crucial evidence, either incinerated or soaked with water from fire hoses. Cops believed they had their two killers, and the pair were convicted. Robert Springsteen received a death sentence in 2001 for killing Ayers, and Michael Scott was caged for life for the death of Ayers the following year. And then, their convictions were overturned. The case went cold again. Jackson remains confident he will clear the case. The two men initially convicted of the murders refused to take part in the docuseries. It wasn't always that way. Springsteen participated in another project in 2009. He told a sales clerk helping him find clothes for his appearance: 'I'm sure you probably think it's really funny, but we're doing a documentary because I just got off death row.' Callous attitude aside, a DNA sample that detectives lifted from the crime scene does not belong to either Scott or Springsteen. But with genetic science making quantum leaps, it is not unreasonable for the killers to be identified. 'One of the things that we want the public to know is that this case is active,' Jackson said. 'It's constantly worked on.' Jackson agrees that forensic technology is likely to play a role in bringing the girls' murderers to justice. 'If I didn't think I could solve it, then why get up every day?' he said. 'I think that with new technology, new information that we have − that I can't go into − even since I've taken the case over, the ability to do more with less when it comes to forensics is light-years ahead than it was a few years ago.' 'When I started, we needed a certain amount (of DNA),' Jackson explained. 'We weren't even close to it, but that amount that you need is so much less now.' 'I am confident that I will solve this,' he said. CRIME HUNTER: A true crime cornucopia of American madness and mayhem CRIME HUNTER: Did teen temptress' sex trysts with foster dad lead to murder? CRIME HUNTER: Sex, money behind mystery murder of dentist's wife on safari? Jackson added that human intelligence will also play a role in clearing the case, and he hopes the docuseries will trigger memories and witnesses who may have previously been afraid to talk to police. 'Somebody out there knows something,' Jackson said. 'That's one of the things with cold cases. You do get people over time that, for whatever reason, may not have been willing to come forward years ago that now feel more comfortable. Or they thought it was something small and didn't ever say anything, and they're like, 'Well, maybe I should call in this time and mention it.'' 'Who knows? It could be the break we need,' he said. If you have any information about the case, visit or send an email to yogurtshop@ bhunter@ @HunterTOSun

NYC to shut down last migrant hotel after shelling out $170 million to crime-ridden shelter
NYC to shut down last migrant hotel after shelling out $170 million to crime-ridden shelter

New York Post

time4 hours ago

  • New York Post

NYC to shut down last migrant hotel after shelling out $170 million to crime-ridden shelter

It's the end of an error. New York City's last-standing — and most notorious — migrant hotel will soon stop housing illegal border crossers, The Post has learned. The once-four-star Row NYC hotel on Eighth Avenue in Midtown was repurposed in October 2022, so its 1,331 rooms could be used as a shelter while the Big Apple dealt with the crippling migrant crisis, but Mayor Eric Adams confirmed the city's $5.13 million-a-month contract with the hotel won't be renewed in April. 5 New York City's last-standing and most notorious migrant hotel – the Row NYC — will soon stop housing illegal border crossers. The city's $5.13 million-a-month contract with Row NYC expires in April and will not being renewed. Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Post The deal has allowed the hotel — which is owned by Boston-based real estate titan Rockpoint Group — to already rake in more than $170 million. It's unclear what the future holds for the establishment, which once charged $414 to $435 per weeknight for standard rooms before becoming a shelter. Reps for the company did not return messages. 'We are proud to share that we will be closing another site — the Row Hotel, the last hotel in the city's emergency shelter system — marking yet another major milestone in our administration's recovery from this international humanitarian crisis,' Adams told The Post Friday. 5 Luiz C. Ribeiro for New York Post The Row, which boasts on it's website that is 'more New York than New York,' was the first hotel to be enlisted by the city to take in migrants after Adams declared the city's existing homeless shelter system had reached a 'breaking point.' Since then, it's been magnet for stabbings and other crimes, with rowdy Tren de Aragau-linked gangbangers among its tenants, including one 25-year-old Venezuelan migrant who allegedly broke into a Manhattan prosecutor's apartment, robbed her at gunpoint and pleasured himself in front of her. Other thugs staying there also attacked cops on numerous occasions, including a July 2024 incident where one officer was bit and other had a moped hurled at them. Workers there have also complained the hotel has become a wild 'free-for-all' of sex, drugs and violence after the city began housing migrants there,. 5 Dennis A. Clark The Midtown South Precinct, that includes Row NYC and the Times Square area, has long had among the highest crime rates in the city. Although the precinct that seen a nearly 10% decline in crime this year compared to 2024, burglaries are up nearly 16% and felony assaults 2%, NYPD data as of Aug. 3 show. The migrant crisis has cost city taxpayers more than $8 billion since spring 2022 to provide food, shelter and other services to over 238,000 migrants who flooded into the country because of former President Joe Biden's lax border policies. At its peak, NYC used 220 hotels and other contracted sites to house the newcomers. As of June 25, 2024, the city was operating 193 migrants shelters of which 153, or nearly 80%, were former hotels and other lodging establishments like The Roosevelt in Midtown that were being subsidized by taxpayer dollars, according to an internal list active shelters then reviewed by The Post. 5 Rob Jejenich / NY Post Design Others included houses of worship, recreation centers, and controversial pop-up 'tent city' complexes, including one erected to house 3,000 migrants on Randall's Island; nearly 2,000 at Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn; and another 1,000 outside Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in Queens. However, the city is now down to just four contracted shelters, with the Row NYC being last remaining lodging establishment. The Department of Homeless Services has slowly absorbed remaining migrants into the city-run shelter system, which as of last week was caring for 92,000 residents, including 35,400 migrants. 'Three years ago, thousands of migrants and asylum seekers began streaming into our city every week — and the Adams administration stepped up,' the mayor said Friday. 5 Dennis A. Clark 'We opened hundreds of emergency migrant shelters to ensure no family slept on the street. Since then, we have successfully helped more than 200,000 migrants leave our shelter system and take the next step toward self-sufficiency, the migrant population in our care continues to decline, and we have closed 64 emergency migrant sites, including all of our tent-based facilities.' 'We have skillfully and humanely managed a national humanitarian crisis — and have done what no other city could do,' he added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store