Texas
Police waiting to confront Texas school gunman knew of wounded inside -NYT
June 9 (Reuters) – Legislation enforcement officers in Uvalde, Texas, waited over an hour to storm into the 2 elementary faculty school rooms the place a gunman was holed up, despite the fact that on-scene supervisors knew that some victims have been trapped alive inside, The New York Occasions reported on Thursday.
Citing its evaluation of video footage and different materials gathered by investigators, the Occasions stated greater than a dozen of the 33 kids and three lecturers who have been initially within the two adjoining school rooms remained alive from the time gunfire started inside to when officers entered and killed the suspect one hour and 17 minutes later.
The varsity district police chief main the response appeared from movies and different documentation to have agonized over how lengthy it was taking to acquire protecting gear to make use of when officers charged in, and to discover a key to the classroom doorways, the Occasions stated.
Register now for FREE limitless entry to Reuters.com
“Individuals are going to ask why we’re taking so lengthy,” a person who investigators imagine to be Pete Arredondo, chief of the Uvalde Consolidated Unbiased Faculty District’s police pressure, could possibly be heard saying in the course of the siege, based on a transcript of police body-camera footage. “We’re attempting to protect the remainder of the life.”
The Could 24 assault at Robb Elementary Faculty in Uvalde, a small city in Texas Hill Nation about 80 miles west of San Antonio, killed 19 college students and two lecturers, rating because the deadliest U.S. faculty taking pictures in virtually a decade.
In response to paperwork cited by the Occasions, one of many lecturers died in an ambulance and three of the kids died at close by hospitals, heightening questions on whether or not extra lives might have been saved had the victims been reached sooner.
The Texas Division of Public Security (DPS) publicly acknowledged days later that as many as 19 officers had waited about an hour in a hallway exterior school rooms 111 and 112 earlier than a U.S. Border Patrol-led tactical group lastly made entry.
DPS officers have stated that Arredondo made the selection to carry off on sending officers in to neutralize the gunman, believing the instant risk to college students inside had abated after an preliminary flurry of gunfire within the school rooms.
Two officers have been grazed by bullets fired at them as they initially approached one of many school rooms, and no additional try was made to confront the gunman for one more 40 minutes, police have stated.
The pinnacle of DPS, Steven McGraw, has stated the delay was “the mistaken determination,” acknowledging that at the least two fourth-grade ladies cowering inside the school rooms positioned frantic, whispered cellphone calls to native emergency-911 dispatchers pleading for police to ship assist.
It stays unclear whether or not Arredondo or different officers inside the college discovered of these 911 calls, the Occasions stated.
However the newspaper reported that investigative supplies present that Arredondo and others on the scene turned conscious in some unspecified time in the future that not everybody inside the school rooms was already useless.
One among six uniformed law enforcement officials on Arredondo’s faculty district pressure, Ruben Ruiz, had rushed to the scene and knowledgeable supervisors that his spouse, fourth-grade trainer Eva Mireles, was shot however nonetheless alive in one of many school rooms after she known as him from inside, based on the Occasions. Mireles later died of her wounds.
The Occasions stated Arredondo didn’t reply to a number of requests for touch upon its article.
Register now for FREE limitless entry to Reuters.com
Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Modifying by Leslie Adler
Our Requirements: The Thomson Reuters Belief Rules.
Texas
Former Colorado defensive end Dayon Hayes transfers to Texas A&M
Former Colorado Buffaloes defensive end Dayon Hayes is set to continue his collegiate career at Texas A&M after transferring following a season-ending injury. Hayes, a 6-foot-3, 265-pound defender, began his journey at Pitt, where he played from 2020 to 2023, accumulating 13 sacks and 80 tackles over four seasons.
At Pitt, Hayes showcased his potential in his sophomore and junior years, logging around 500 combined snaps and producing 30 pressures. His breakout came in 2023 when he amassed 44 pressures and a 13% pass rush win rate, ranking 12th in the ACC. Hayes also demonstrated solid run defense, posting an average tackle depth of 1.6 yards and recording 10.5 stops for loss. His ability to set the edge and prevent runners from escaping outside made him a critical piece of Pitt’s defense.
Following his success at Pitt, Hayes transferred to Colorado as a highly sought-after addition to Deion Sanders’ revamped Buffaloes roster. He made an immediate impact, registering two sacks and 3.5 tackles for loss in Colorado’s first three games. However, his promising start was cut short by a knee injury in the fourth game, sidelining him for the rest of the season.
Deion Sanders says he won’t attend the 2025 NFL Draft in Green Bay
Despite the setback, Hayes’ strong early performance likely earned him a medical redshirt, granting him another year of eligibility. With his final collegiate season on the horizon, Hayes opted to join Texas A&M, bringing his pass-rushing skills to the SEC. The Aggies, coming off an eight-win season, are set to face USC in the Las Vegas Bowl. Hayes’ ability to pressure quarterbacks and defend the run should bolster Texas A&M’s defensive front, adding experience and depth to their edge rotation for the 2024 season.
Texas
D-FW can claim Texas’ best high school football team in an otherwise down year for Dallas
ARLINGTON — North Crowley showed out on Saturday in its dazzling 50-21 victory over Austin Westlake in the 6A Division I state title game, winning the program’s second state championship and putting Fort Worth high school football on the map in front of 36,120 fans at AT&T Stadium.
Until North Crowley took the field at 7:30 p.m., there was a possibility the Dallas-Fort Worth area might boast only one state champion in 2024. Celina routed Kilgore 55-21 in the 4A Division I state championship to capture the program’s ninth state title and its first under coach Bill Elliott.
But North Texas teams came up short in the next three title games, the region’s worst showing at state since 2021, when South Oak Cliff became the first Dallas ISD school to win a recognized state championship since 1958, but Denton Guyer and Duncanville fell in the 6A state championship games.
Two-time state champion South Oak Cliff missed a last-second field goal, falling 38-35 to third-year program Richmond Randle in the 5A Division II state title game Friday night. It was SOC’s second straight loss in the state championship game.
“The future is still bright,” South Oak Cliff coach Jason Todd said. “We just gotta find out what’s going to get us over this hump.”
Smithson Valley, from the San Antonio area, topped Highland Park 32-20 as the six-time state champion faded in the second half of the 5A Division I state title game Saturday afternoon.
In the second game of the day, eight-time state champion Southlake Carroll extended its title drought to 13 years with a 24-17 loss to Austin Vandegrift in the 6A Division II game.
“It’ll happen one day. I’m excited about what the future holds,” said Carroll coach Riley Dodge, who fell to 0-2 in state title games as a coach.
The Dallas area claimed three football state champions in 2023 with Anna winning the 4A Division I state title and Duncanville and DeSoto sweeping the 6A Division I and II state championships, respectively. The southern Dallas County schools also swept the 6A state championships in 2022, when South Oak Cliff won its second straight 5A Division II state title.
But this year, the rest of Texas didn’t let the Dallas area, a high school football mecca, run the table. Teams from each of the state’s major metros — Austin, Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston and San Antonio —- won a title in each division of the UIL’s two highest classifications.
Even before this week’s state championship games, 2024 seemed to mark a changing of the guard. Neither Duncanville, DeSoto nor Houston-area power Galena Park North Shore made it to AT&T Stadium this year. Nor did 12-time UIL state champion Aledo, the juggernaut west of Fort Worth that had won the last two 5A Division I state championships.
But North Crowley did, after knocking off both DeSoto and Duncanville this season. North Texas might not have dominated the competition as it has in recent years, but for a third straight season, the king of 6A reigns in Dallas-Fort Worth.
“When you get to this point, there’s only one team that’s standing that’s hoisting the trophy. And fortunately for us, this year it’s us and we just happen to be from 817,” North Crowley coach Ray Gates said. “We’re elated to be able to bring that type of recognition back to our community, just to let people know that when you talk about this area, when you talk about Metroplex football, you can’t forget about us.”
On Twitter/X: @t_myah
Find more high school sports coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
Sign up for our FREE HS newsletter.
Texas
Saving Hope Rescue receives $1,000 donation as part of CBS News Texas 11 Days of Giving
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
-
Politics1 week ago
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
-
Technology1 week ago
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
-
Politics1 week ago
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit
-
Business1 week ago
Freddie Freeman's World Series walk-off grand slam baseball sells at auction for $1.56 million
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta’s Instagram boss: who posted something matters more in the AI age
-
News1 week ago
East’s wintry mix could make travel dicey. And yes, that was a tornado in Calif.
-
Technology1 day ago
Google’s counteroffer to the government trying to break it up is unbundling Android apps