Dont worry the cop haters are the ones in office. They wont hide a thing. What makes me scratch my head are the cop haters right here on this forum that wont even allow due process to take place. They like the libs want a lynching. I know what side im on. If there was wrong done then punish the ones responsible but to say that Texas or the government is covering this up is just silly.
Well, we all know the government would never cover anything up. I've been scratching my head as well Lloyd, trying to figure out who the cop haters on the forum are. What I have figured out is, on that terrible day in Texas, there were a bunch of well armed, sworn to protect the public Policemen who stood around sanitizing their hands while children were being slaughtered. That is a fact! Some may say, well they were waiting orders. if Firefighters were massed in a hallway with children trapped in a room on fire, would they would wait for their leaders to say when they could enter?
Report on Uvalde Shooting Finds ‘Systemic Failures’ in Police Response
The decision to finally confront the gunman was made by a small group of officers and could have been made far earlier, the report found.
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Vincent Salazar, center, grandfather of Layla Salazar, who was killed at Robb Elementary, holds a report released by the Texas House investigative committee on the shooting.
Vincent Salazar, center, grandfather of Layla Salazar, who was killed at Robb Elementary, holds a report released by the Texas House investigative committee on the shooting. Credit...Eric Gay/Associated Press
J. David GoodmanEdgar Sandoval
By J. David Goodman and Edgar Sandoval
July 17, 2022
HOUSTON — The first comprehensive assessment of the law enforcement response to the deadly school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, found that blame for the failure to swiftly confront the gunman rested not only with the school police chief, but also with the scores of state and federal officers who gathered at the deadly scene but did not act.
The 77-page report, released Sunday by a special Texas House committee, represented a broad indictment of police inaction at Robb Elementary School, citing “systemic failures” that left the school inadequately secured and the police officers who responded mired in confusion and bad information.
Nearly 400 officers responded to the school that day. Yet the decision to finally confront the gunman was made by a small group of officers, including specially trained Border Patrol agents and a deputy sheriff from a neighboring county, the report found, concluding that others at the scene could have taken charge and done so far earlier.