Texas
Uvalde parents’ anger and quest for answers persist after committee faults school and police in mass shooting
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UVALDE — The family members of 21 individuals killed throughout Texas’ worst faculty capturing have spent weeks grieving their losses and begging officers for solutions.
However even after state officers publicly launched essentially the most complete look but on the Robb Elementary capturing and regulation enforcement’s painful delay in confronting the gunman, many relations of the victims expressed anger and continued frustration Sunday.
“Cowards!” Ruben Mata, whose 10-year-old great-granddaughter Alexandria Rubio died, yelled on the three members of a Texas Home committee investigating the bloodbath throughout a press convention.
Hours earlier, the committee had launched a report describing how the shooter ready and armed himself, how the varsity district fell brief on campus security preparations and the way regulation enforcement moved too slowly to kill the shooter.
Kin of these killed and different residents mentioned the report, a non-public assembly with Home committee members and a day press convention both advised them issues they’d already concluded or skirted solutions they’re nonetheless looking for.
Some faulted state officers for not saying extra about how they plan to forestall one other mass capturing. Others mentioned the committee tried to redirect blame from regulation enforcement to highschool officers by specializing in the truth that a number of Robb Elementary doorways have been unlocked when the shooter arrived. Some say they need officers who delayed the confrontation to be criminally charged.
“They need to be charged for not entering into and for letting that occur to our youngsters,” mentioned Evadulia Orta, whose 10-year-old son Rojelio Torres who was killed within the capturing.
In accordance with the Home committee’s report, a lot of the victims died rapidly, torn aside by bullets designed for battlefields because the gunman fired about 100 rounds earlier than police arrived. As soon as regulation enforcement made it to the varsity, it took greater than an hour to confront the gunman, one thing that has been closely criticized by residents, officers and consultants. It’s unclear whether or not a flawless police response would have saved any lives. However the report means that stopping the gunman sooner may have made a distinction for some victims.
The chair of the Home Investigative Committee on the Robb Elementary Capturing advised residents and reporters at a day press convention that the 77-page preliminary report will inform the Legislature on what legal guidelines it may cross to forestall extra massacres. However committee members stopped wanting offering any particular proposals.
“We have now robust opinions about modifications to coverage that should be achieved. In the present day is just not the day that we’re going to share what our robust emotions and convictions are about that,” mentioned state Rep. Dustin Burrows, R-Lubbock. “After some time period, we’ll put our policymaker hats again on and share these opinions with the committee and others about what we predict wants to vary and what’s achieved, however proper now, we’re gonna let the report communicate for itself and concentrate on the info that have been present in there.”
The three committee members — Burrows; state Rep. Joe Moody, D-El Paso; and former state Supreme Court docket Justice Eva Guzman — began the press convention half an hour late. They collectively spoke for about 45 minutes, then allowed reporters to ask questions for about half-hour. Residents who attended grew pissed off, generally shouting their questions over reporters’ inquiries.
Alfred Garza III, the daddy of 10-year-old Amerie Jo Garza who was killed within the bloodbath, mentioned he didn’t want the 77-page report to search out out that law enforcement officials on the scene did not cease the shooter sooner and probably save extra lives.
“Everyone already knew that earlier than this report was even made,” he mentioned. “I used to be on the positioning on the faculty when all these things was taking place. And I used to be a type of mother and father that stood again and let the officers do their job. Nicely, seems, they didn’t do their job.”
For weeks, state leaders have largely blamed Uvalde colleges police Chief Pete Arredondo for regulation enforcement ready greater than an hour to confront the gunman. However the Home report mentioned failures went past native police. The report mentioned 376 regulation enforcement officers from a number of native, state and federal businesses lacked clear management, primary communications and adequate urgency to take down the gunman.
The report additionally detailed how faculty security protocols fell brief. Whereas Robb Elementary’s energetic shooter coverage known as for classroom doorways to be locked throughout courses, a number of witnesses advised the Home committee that staff typically left inside and exterior doorways unlocked or propped open.
“It’s my hope that each faculty district takes a while to learn this report. There have been a number of systemic failures, together with not locking doorways,” Guzman mentioned.
New Mild Baptist Church Pastor Daryl Colvin, 68, needs law enforcement officials to take accountability and apologize for his or her missteps at Robb Elementary. However as an alternative, he looks like officers have redirected blame to the varsity staffers, focusing as an alternative on why the doorways to the constructing have been unlocked.
The Home committee members additionally mentioned the report was issued to be clear with neighborhood members, however Colvin mentioned he nonetheless looks like he’s in a “cloud” of misinformation.
Within the days after the capturing, state officers made false statements about what occurred. The Home report acknowledged that the misinformation undermined public belief. However the native pastor mentioned the neighborhood nonetheless hasn’t been in a position to get the entire fact. And examples of officers and reviews contradicting one another about what occurred had already began piling up earlier than the Sunday launch of the Home committee’s work.
Standing in entrance of the mural she painted to memorialize sufferer Uziyah Garcia, Gage Brown mentioned on Sunday it’s been troublesome for residents to course of the loss locally when there have been inaccuracies and conflicting data unfold concerning the police response.
Brown is from Brackettville, about 40 minutes west of Uvalde. Rising up, her household would attend church and grocery store in Uvalde. She mentioned she’s seen Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin and different leaders shut down conversations about gun management despite the fact that mother and father have been advocating for such measures within the days after the incident.
Burrows declined to debate particular insurance policies which will come up out of the report.
“Simply not in the present day, out of respect,” Burrows mentioned.
Texas leaders have agreed to dedicate greater than $100 million in state funds to spice up faculty security and psychological well being providers following the Uvalde bloodbath. However limiting entry to weapons is probably going a nonstarter within the Legislature, which is managed by Republicans.
Whereas polls persistently present that Texans are divided about gun management — with 40% to 50% saying they need stricter gun legal guidelines — the overwhelming majority of the state legal guidelines handed over the previous 13 years have expanded the place weapons are allowed, who can have a firearm in colleges and the precise to overtly carry weapons. These legal guidelines have come as Texas skilled a number of mass shootings.
Because the Uvalde bloodbath, state leaders have mentioned they need to concentrate on “hardening” colleges and growing psychological well being care entry.
Orta, the mom of 10-year-old sufferer Rojelio Torres, mentioned she doesn’t know if she will be able to ship her different three children again to highschool till she is aware of if the varsity district plans to improve safety, akin to altering the locks or getting new fencing. She mentioned that she was among the many mother and father who met with the three-member committee earlier than the report was launched publicly however that she obtained only a few questions answered. She’s one mum or dad who needs to see officers criminally charged.
Uvalde County District Lawyer Christina Mitchell Busbee will resolve if any felony prices needs to be filed in opposition to any law enforcement officials after the Texas Rangers full their investigation. She not too long ago advised the Uvalde Chief-Information that her obligation is “to see that justice is completed in a good and neutral method to find out if actions in my jurisdiction rise to the extent of a felony felony offense.”
The Uvalde colleges police chief and the appearing chief of town police division on the day of the capturing have each been positioned on go away as their actions are investigated.
Whereas Home committee members didn’t publicly tackle the authorized or skilled fates of regulation enforcement, Guzman, the previous Texas Supreme Court docket justice, mentioned officers who did not take motion shouldn’t be working in regulation enforcement.
“The report says that in the event you’re not prepared to place the lives of the individuals you serve or of these youngsters earlier than your personal, for my part it’s best to discover one other job,” she mentioned.
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Texas
UT System’s free tuition plan sparks resistance from some Texas lawmakers
WASHINGTON — State Rep. Brian Harrison, R-Midlothian, said Friday he plans to meet with top University of Texas System officials after they announced a plan to provide free tuition and waived fees to students whose families make $100,000 or less.
While many elected officials have praised the initiative, Harrison criticized it as an “abuse of power” that makes Texas higher education “more socialist than California.”
Harrison said Friday he’s unswayed by statements from the system and supporters who say the move will be funded from university endowments, not taxpayers.
Harrison compared such statements to someone saying they’re removing water from the shallow side of a pool, not the deep end. It’s all the same water.
“Money is fungible, so that doesn’t satisfy me in the slightest,” Harrison said.
The new initiative is an expansion of the Promise Plus Program, a needs-based financial aid initiative, and comes amid widespread concerns about the impact of inflation and college costs on families. Gov. Greg Abbott recently prohibited Texas colleges and universities from raising tuition for the next two years.
UT System Chancellor James B. Milliken hailed the expansion as a “game changer” that will make “enormous, real difference” to improve college access for all Texans.
Not everyone is a fan.
Harrison and like-minded House colleagues have compared it to President Joe Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan that drew intense blowback from conservatives and was largely struck down by the courts. They also said such a consequential change in policy should come from the elected lawmakers serving in the Legislature.
“There must be consequences,” Harrison said on X. “UT’s budget must be cut, and bureaucrats should be fired.”
He led 10 Republican lawmakers, most of them incoming freshmen, in a letter to the regents demanding answers to a litany of questions, including the price tag of the expansion and the source of that money.
“What specific statutory authority did the regents rely on to make a decision this consequential, which will have direct financial consequences for our constituents, many of whom are already struggling to put gas in their tanks and food on their tables?” the lawmakers wrote.
UT System spokesman Paul Corliss has said the program is not funded through taxes or any kind of public subsidy.
“Rather it is funded through existing UT System endowments,” Corliss said.
Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin, hammered that point in a response to Harrison on social media.
“There are no tax dollars involved,” Howard said on X. “Higher Ed institutions are already helping families afford college. This expands philanthropic endowments and helps meet affordability goals of [Abbott and the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board].”
Harrison and his colleagues will have to contend with many members of the public embracing a plan that already is encouraging young people to adjust their higher education aspirations.
Frank Whitefeather, a high school senior, stayed up until 2:30 a.m. Friday working on his college application essay.
He was freshly motivated after the announcement that students whose families make less than $100,000 annually will get free tuition and waived fees at the University of Texas at Austin and other schools in the UT System.
“I wouldn’t be in debt,” said Whitefeather, 17. “I wouldn’t have to have student loans.”
Whitefeather, who attends Dallas ISD’s Sunset High School, thinks the UT news also could change many of his peers’ lives. It’s already changing his plans. Whitefeather hopes to study engineering and be his own boss one day. Texas A&M and UT Austin were his top two choices, but the free tuition announcement has pushed UT ahead.
Harrison said the university system is being contradictory by simultaneously saying it has enough money to offer tuition-free education, but also that a tuition freeze could leave it cash strapped and require more funding from the Legislature.
“I guarantee you they’re going to be requesting more tax money from the Legislature next session,” he said.
Texas
What to know about the newly named leader of Texas DPS
The Public Safety Commission has unanimously approved Freeman Martin to lead the Texas Department of Public Safety, tapping a top lieutenant of outgoing Director Steve McCraw.
Here’s what to know about the incoming head of the state law enforcement agency:
Martin, 56, is senior deputy director of DPS, where he has a “crucial role” in planning, directing, managing and overseeing the agency’s activities and operations, according to his staff biography.
DPS has more than 11,000 employees and a $3.5 billion biennial budget.
His career at DPS began as a Highway Patrol trooper in 1990. He has been a Highway Patrol corporal, narcotics service sergeant and a sergeant, lieutenant, captain and major with the Texas Rangers, the agency’s elite investigative division. He also has been regional commander for the Central Texas Region and deputy director of DPS, a post he was appointed to in 2018.
He has expertise in executive protection, violent crime prevention operations, intelligence, counterterrorism and homeland security, and he led the DPS response to the Sutherland Springs mass shooting, Hurricane Harvey and Operation Lone Star.
Martin established a Texas Anti-Gang Center in San Antonio, helped develop the Texas Rangers Major Crime Scene Response Team and runs a number of initiatives to support local law enforcement agencies.
He has a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice and is a graduate of Northwestern University’s School of Police Staff and Command.
The Public Safety Commission, which oversees DPS, conducted a national search after McCraw announced his retirement in August.
The five-member commission is appointed by the governor and confirmed by the Texas Senate. At a Sept. 6 meeting, the commission set minimum requirements for the position, opened a four-week window for resumes and letters of interest through Oct. 4, and created a subcommittee to vet applicants and make recommendations.
The subcommittee selected three finalists for in-person and virtual interviews conducted Oct. 16 and Oct. 24. At its meeting Wednesday, commissioners deliberated privately for nearly 2½ hours before returning to announce Martin as its undisputed choice.
His appointment is effective Dec. 1. He will be sworn in the following day at a ceremony at DPS headquarters.
McCraw, whose retirement takes effect next month, led the department for the past 15 years, calling it “the greatest honor of my life.”
He rose from Highway Patrol trooper in 1977 to narcotics agent in 1983, when he left DPS to join the FBI. McCraw left the federal agency in 2004 to become Texas’ homeland security director until he was named to lead DPS in 2009.
McCraw was heavily scrutinized over the police response to the May 2022 Robb Elementary School shooting in Uvalde, including the inaction of dozens of DPS troopers who responded. Officers from multiple agencies waited more than an hour to enter a classroom to confront and kill the gunman who killed 19 students and two teachers.
McCraw was not in Uvalde at the time. He later called the police response an “abject failure” but resisted calls to step down. McCraw blamed the delayed police response on the local school police chief.
In his retirement note to staff, McCraw didn’t say what’s next for him. Instead, he expressed his “deep pride and heartfelt gratitude” to his employees.
Texas
Harris County attorney pushes for stronger laws to protect Texas renters from negligent landlords
HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) — It’s no secret that if you’re a renter in Texas, you don’t have the upper hand.
“It’s basically very friendly to landlords to be able to punish tenants, to evict tenants, and so it creates this, what I think is an overly favorable environment to landlords,” Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee said.
When problems go without repair for months, the law says you still cannot withhold rent, and there are hoops you have to jump through to hold your landlord accountable.
Through Action 13’s Renters’ Rights, we hear about these problems often.
So, what can be done?
It’s a long process and rare for a city or county in Texas to step in and hold negligent landlords accountable.
Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee is determined to change that. He says he knows what it’s like.
“Like many other folks in Harris County, I came up in a working-class family, and part of my upbringing was living in an apartment complex. This was a complex that had units that were routinely infested with roaches, that had cars being broken into all the time. My mother’s car was stolen multiple times from this apartment complex,” Menefee explained.
He’s seen it and wants to stop it.
“Here in the state of Texas, there just aren’t laws on the books that allow us the opportunity to go after landlords,” Menefee said.
He says that come January when the legislature reconvenes, he’ll be in Austin, pushing for a fix. “What I’d like to see is a law that allows the government to step in and immediately call these folks to account, whether that’s through an administrative procedure, through fines, through a lawsuit, anything to push them in the direction of doing the right thing,” Menefee explained.
His office found a creative way to sue a local complex earlier this year.
The Palms on Rolling Creek in north Harris County had severe sewage issues for years. Months after the lawsuit was filed, the owners did make progress in fixing it.
Menefee is putting negligent landlords on notice, and you can help.
“My ask to you is if you are living in an apartment complex that is not treating you right, or you know someone who is, have them report that to us and also reach out to your local, state representative or state senator,” Menefee said.
They need to know about the problems to help them make their case for why they believe these laws need to change.
“I understand your experience. I have lived through that myself. My family has lived through that. We hear you, and we are going to keep working on those issues,” Menefee said.
For more news updates, follow Courtney Carpenter on Facebook, X and Instagram.
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