The Daily Signal - Bonus: Did Law Enforcement Wait Too Long to Attack Uvalde Shooter? Security Expert Weighs in
Episode Date: May 27, 2022New reporting reveals that there was an hour-long gap between the Robb Elementary school shooter's first shots in the vicinity of the school and when he was killed by law enforcement. (The Daily Signa...l does not name the shooter in order to keep the focus on the victims.) Now questions are swirling about law enforcement's decisions, and whether they were the right ones. Steve Bucci, a visiting fellow at The Heritage Foundation and a security expert, unpacks what needs to be investigated and what are the most important questions to get answered. (The Daily Signal is the news outlet of The Heritage Foundation.) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is a bonus episode of the Daily Signal podcast for Friday, May 27th.
I'm Kate Trinco.
There are more details emerging about the terrible school shooting at Rob Elementary in
Uvaldi, Texas on Tuesday.
To be clear, there's still a lot we don't know, but we do have some additional information
now.
And here to discuss it is Steve Bucci, a visiting fellow at the Heritage Foundation.
Steve has an extensive background in security.
a former top Pentagon official and a former Army Special Forces officer.
And he's also written about school safety extensively for the Heritage Foundation.
Steve, thanks for joining me.
Again, it's my pleasure to be here, but not my pleasure to have to once again talk about this subject.
Yeah, no, it's not enjoyable. It's a terrible tragedy.
So I do want to be clear that we're still learning, you know, investigations are still ongoing.
You know, we're going to discuss a lot of information in this interview, but please know that information is changing as more developments come out.
But on Thursday, Victor Escalon, who is a regional director for the Texas Department of Public Safety, gave a briefing to the media about the timeline of the shooting at Rob Elementary.
So one revelation, and this is according to the Wall Street Journal, is that the shooter, who I'm not going to use his name because we want to remember the victims, not the murderer.
here at Daily Signal. The shooter was shooting outside the school for 12 minutes before he entered.
Steve, what are your thoughts about that revelation? Was that potentially a time that the shooter
should have been stopped? Well, certainly, if law enforcement had been there at that time,
they could have engaged him outside. This is the thing he shot his grandmother, drove the vehicle
to the street the school was on, came out of the vehicle, and started shooting at some people
outside of a funeral home, which was across the street from the school. And then he turned to
the school, apparently fired at the building, not sure what effect he was trying for there,
but then eventually hopped the fence onto the school grounds and then went into an unlocked
back door. That's really the key. I mean, it would have been nice to take advantage of that time when he
was still outside the school building, but unfortunately, there weren't any responders there at
that moment to take advantage of that better situation than when he went in.
So we've also learned that the police did not shoot the murderer until he'd been inside the school
for around an hour. So I'm going to read a long quote here.
from the Wall Street Journal. And again, this is based off the media briefing with Victor Escalon
about that timeline. So the journal reports that the shooter, as you said, shot his grandmother
Tuesday morning and used her truck to drive to Rob Elementary School, crashing the vehicle
into a nearby ditch at 1128 a.m. The gunman then began shooting at people at a funeral home
across the street prompting a 9-11 call reporting a gunman at the school at 1130.
The shooter climbed a fence onto school grounds and began firing before walking inside,
unimpeded at 1140. And that's the 12 minutes we just discussed.
The first police arrived on the scene at 1144 and exchanged gunfire with the shooter
who locked himself in a fourth grade classroom. There he killed the students and teachers.
A Border Patrol tactical team went into the school an hour later around 1240 p.m.
was able to get into the classroom and kill the shooter.
Now, I know that was a lot of numbers I just threw at you.
And I'm certainly not a security expert, but, you know, it's hard.
It breaks my heart to hear that first 9-11 call was at 1130,
but the shooter wasn't killed or stopped until 1240.
What are your initial thoughts regarding this?
timeline? Well, the first part that could have been crucial is when that 911 call went in,
when he was still outside the building, that someone at 911 or the person reporting, it should
have said, hey, he's right outside of school. That school should have immediately been notified
and had everybody go into lockdown right then. Normally, if there's any kind of
criminal activity that close to a school, they locked down the facility completely. Now, maybe it wouldn't
have helped because that back door, the point of entry that the shooter used, was supposed to be
locked already. At that point in the school day, that door should have been locked and people
should have been going in the one door at the front where they checked IDs and that sort of thing.
but it was left open.
So possibly if 9-1-1 tried to call him, they could have gone into lockdown, that might have helped.
Now, once he gets into the school and then shortly thereafter is followed in by police, and they engage him.
But then he ducks into that classroom and barricades the door.
Now, if they had been in lockdown, he should not have been able to.
to get into that classroom. The door should have been locked. Somehow that door was either unlocked
or, you know, maybe knocked on the door. They didn't know who he was and they opened it. We don't
know that part yet. But somehow he got entrance into that fourth grade classroom and then barricaded
the door so that the policemen who were there felt they couldn't breach it. Now, I don't know,
and again, this is more stuff that's going to come out as we have more of these press conferences and stuff
and investigation. What actions did they take to try and breach that door? Did they have the capability?
Could they have gone back and gotten a breaching device from a car, something? But at that point,
they apparently were told back off the, you know, a more qualified,
team, in this case, the Border Patrol tactical team, their technical name is Bortac.
They're like a SWAT team that's part of the Border Patrol, who a bunch of them live,
and a lot of the kids in the school where their children, in that area.
So they were told to back off and wait for the Bortac guys to get there.
That's a problem for me.
We've seen this before. I give you a little history.
after the shooting in Columbine, when we were still under the protocol that if somebody went in a building and took hostages,
everybody stood down, you got the trained hostage negotiators would come, they'd surround the building,
they'd do all this stuff, and try and talk the person out. Because prior to that, that was generally how the scenario would play out.
after Columbine, because there the two young men just went into the building and just started shooting people,
it was determined that in these situations, the best course of action is to immediately go into the facility
and confront the shooter with who you have. That's not ideal. It's very dangerous for the law enforcement people who do it.
but it was determined that is the best way to do it.
Over the years since then, we've seen it kind of go back and forth,
and in some cases, police have gone right in and confronted the person in other situations.
They haven't.
The Pulse nightclub shooting in Tampa is one that comes to mind,
where a very similar set of instructions were given to the first.
first responders that got there, hey, he's inside, stand down until SWAT gets there and let them do it.
That's a mistake.
That is a violation of protocol, and it leaves the victims at incredible risk for way too long.
Right.
And I should know it, I think Pulse was actually in Orlando.
I'm sorry, you're right.
Orlando, you're correct.
So along the lines we've been discussing, one of the most upsetting details emerging from this shooting is reports and there's some videos on social media.
I'm not 100% sure they're authentic, but they've certainly been making the rounds, that there were parents outside the school, begging people to go in or to be allowed to go in themselves.
The timeline on all this isn't exactly clear if it was after the shooter was shot or before, but there's a lot of,
is one dad, Javier Kazares, whose daughter Jacqueline, was sadly one of the victims, a little
fourth grade girl. And Kazares, her dad, Javier Kazares, told the Associated Press that he suggested
to others waiting that maybe they should go into the school since no one else was. He said, quote,
let's just rush in because the cops aren't doing anything like they are supposed to. What are your
thoughts on this and yeah, I mean, what can parents do, if anything? And I mean, God forbid,
anyone ever face the situation? You know, this is a tragedy here in this regard on top of the
tragedy in general. You know, normally when there's an incident and the professional responders
arrive, the civilians stay out. You know, if a building is on fire,
you know, and the father wants to run in to rescue their kids.
The firemen don't let them do that.
The firemen go in and get the kids because they've got the equipment.
They don't want to create more casualties by well-meaning people who have a connection,
but no expertise or experience to get involved.
Similarly here, you know, you don't send unarmed civilians into the firefight.
it just because you're going to create more casualties.
This is a strange situation because, as I stated, that apparently, and we're still sorting all
us out, so we, you know, let's not hang anybody yet.
The law enforcement who were there were told wait until the Bortak experts got there.
in hindsight that was clearly kind of a bad command decision by someone, and we don't know who.
It wasn't that the law enforcement that were there did not want to go in, did not want to help,
but they were instructed to stand down and wait for people with more firepower, more breaching capability,
the ability to get through that barricaded door into the room where the shooter was committing his crimes.
It's a sad thing because there were little kids in there being shot at that time.
So I understand the parents, you know, desire to go in there and try and help.
I don't think they would have helped.
I think it would have potentially caused more casualties.
But that is going to be a point of inventive.
that's going to get a ton of focus and should because of this delay.
And in the perception of these grieving parents, these guys are standing around doing nothing.
Well, they can't send all the cops, and you can't all get through one door.
So there were law enforcement watching the door, making sure this guy didn't go anyplace else.
but the fact that, you know, maybe they could have utilized those assets more effectively
to maybe approach the room through the windows.
I don't know.
I'm not familiar with the school facility itself.
But that's going to be where the investigation is going to go now.
It's going to continue focusing on the shooter, his motivations, that sort of thing.
But there's going to be an enormous microscope down on who made the decision to
tell those initial responders to wait. Why was that made? And the only thing we have now is
that same official from that region made a comment and he said, you know, well, we couldn't tell
him to go in there because our guys might have gotten shot. That one's going to, that's going to be
a tough one to sell when little children are at risk. And I can't imagine that most of the
the other officers that were there were all that happy about having to get that order either.
So a lot more to come on that, a lot more investigation, but that's going to be the big question
right now.
So we've also learned that it appears that the shooter, I think, shot everyone who died
the 19 kids and two adults in one classroom. Is that surprising that a school shooting with
largely take place in one classroom? Is that normal? No, it's not. In fact, that's probably
one of the first times that's happened, which may tell you that some of the protocols that the
school had were working. The other kids were locked down in other rooms. They apparently were safe.
The exact timing of that lockdown is one of the key things. As I said, why was this guy able to get
into that one classroom.
Now, I understand why he didn't go to others because there was law enforcement outside the
door that had engaged him and he was trying to keep them out.
So he had no ability at that point to move around the school.
That's a positive thing.
Unfortunately, he's got, you know, an entire fourth grade class full of kids and teachers
in there with it.
So that's the sad thing and the difficulty here in,
and dealing with it. Why they were not able to breach that room, I don't know. I can't believe that
this young man, you know, was that good at locking down the doors. I don't know. He may have used
the barricade procedures that the classroom had to keep people like him out, to keep the police
out. But again, we don't know that yet. We've got to get all of the information from the
investigation. And as we know, this information seems to come out progressively as the officials
get more and more info and we get more and more enlightenment on the decisions made.
Right. So I know we've been talking a bit about this, but overall, for those investigating now,
looking at the response to this terrible shooting and how it was handled, what do you see as being
the most important information that they should be trying to verify to determine right now.
What questions should they be trying to answer?
Well, obviously, motivation and why this guy targeted this school, that kind of thing.
So the shooter-related part of the investigation. The next thing that needs to be checked is,
why was that back door open? And how did this guy know the back door was open?
Because from what I've seen on the few clips, it seems like he hopped the fence and went right to that door.
He didn't go around checking other doors and only found that one open.
So somehow, I mean, that tells me maybe that door was always open and this kid has seen it before.
You know, if he did a reconnaissance of it and noticed that.
So we need to know that.
And then once he was in there, we need more fidelity on that initial engagement by those
first law enforcement that arrived to see what happened that allowed him to get inside that
classroom. Why wasn't that door locked to keep him out of the specific classroom? And then what did he
do to barricade himself in there? Why were those initial officers unable to get through that door
to engage him quickly and minimize the casualties? And then finally, who made the,
the call to tell those guys, okay, stop trying to get in there, just keep them in that room
and wait for Bortak. That in hindsight was probably the most egregiously bad decision because it
allowed him to just at his will kill off those children and the teachers. So all those aspects
of it have to be, you know, we need to know exactly.
what really happened, what were the thought processes, and then disseminate the information
and use it to hopefully improve procedures, practices at every school in America going forward.
So this is, none of this should stay in the shadows.
It needs to get out everywhere, not with a focus on trying to punish people.
The only criminal here is the shooter, but we got to get to the truth because that's the only
way we can do it better than next time.
But sadly, there's likely to be a next time, and we clearly need to do it better than we
did this time.
So speaking of preparation, it looks like the school district and Evaldi was actually very aware
of school shootings.
I mean, I assume all school districts at this point have plans.
But NBC News ran an article recently that detailed what Evaldi had done to try to make sure their schools were safe.
NBC reports that the Evaldi District had doubled its security budget in recent years.
It had adopted an array of security measures that included its own police force, threat assessment teams at each school, a threat reporting system, social media monitoring software, fences around schools, and a requirement that teachers lock
their classroom doors, according to a security plan posted on the district's website.
Now, of course, just like everything else, there's a lot we don't know.
We don't know whether this plan was followed to the letter at Rob Elementary.
But what's your thoughts on what we know about Evaldi's preparation for something like this
and what questions need to be asked now?
Well, that whole plan needs to be reviewed again to see if, in fact, it was sound.
And then the key thing, and this is, you know, a human factor is you can have the best plan in the world.
If you don't execute it, if you ignore parts of it, it can fall apart pretty quickly.
From the most recent reports, you know, doors were unlocked on the outside.
Having a fence around the building is great.
But if you could just climb over it, like apparently this kid did, you know, that keeps the elementary school kids inside.
doesn't keep a bad guy out.
And then if the doors are supposed to be locked inside the building in the classrooms all the time,
how did this kid get in?
You know, once he was in the building, we know the back door was unlocked.
The police engaged him and he moved down the hallway and went into this classroom.
Why was that door open for him to get in there?
You know, did the teacher just happen to open it to take a kid to the bathroom?
We don't know.
But if they're supposed to be locked, that that's a problem.
Now, having the assessments and all that, that's great.
As long as those assessments were done by qualified people.
I'd have to look at what the money was spent on.
You know, a lot of people seem to like to buy big fancy cameras and things like that,
which is great for getting information after the fact is less useful in defending the
the building in the moment.
And then the last part is they said they had their own police force, which I guess I mean
they have security guards that they have acquired somehow.
Were those volunteers?
Were they paid?
How well were they paid?
Do they have actual law enforcement experience?
Or are they just people who, you know, have a blue uniform and a gun belt?
I don't know.
Were they armed at all?
But it doesn't appear from the latest reports that there were any armed security people on the school grounds at the moment this happened.
So perhaps that, you know, what they're labeling a school police force is, you know, a couple of guys who cruise around and visit the different schools at different times.
And they just didn't happen to be there at that school at that moment.
all that stuff needs to be evaluated and then adjusted to plug any holes that were there.
I've seen that myself.
I mean, I do school evaluations.
I provide security for the school that my grandchildren go to.
And I have to tell you, it's tough when you tell everybody, look, you can only go in and out of this one door,
and you have to wear your badge and you have to check in and out each time you go.
that's kind of inconvenient for the teacher whose classrooms at the far end of the building
and decides, well, I need to go outside to get something from my car, so I'll just prop open
the door near me, go to my car, and then come back. And at that moment, that door's propped open,
the school is vulnerable because there's nobody manning that door. Human desire for convenience
and an ability to convince ourselves that these things will never happen here is very powerful.
And it leads to breaches in security that sadly, bad people oftentimes exploit.
So you can have the best plan, but it's got to be executed properly.
And everybody has to play by the rules or the plan's worth goes way down.
So unfortunately, politics have already been injected into this tragedy and debates are starting.
Some gun control advocates are suggesting that Evaldi shows that you need to ban guns, not just make schools more secure.
I'm going to quote from The Intercept, that's a liberal publication that makes this case.
So they write, as the number of school resource officers has ballooned over the last two decades,
so has the number of school shootings.
There is no evidence that police have the ability to stop these shootings from happening.
Alex Vitale, a sociologist at the City University of New York and the author of End of Policing,
said the idea that a standard armed school police officer is going to stop someone in that situation
has proven not to be true time and time again.
And he also noted that police and security guards are often the first casual
and mass shooting events. What do you think about this argument?
Well, first, he's taking a few things that might be truthful in a microcosm and telescoping
it about everything. First of all, there have been numerous instances where quick response
by either a school resource officer or a responding policeman or, in some cases, volunteers that have
ended school shootings before there was mass killings or, you know, really tragic level stuff.
I mean, anything's a tragedy when somebody's hurt, but, you know, compared to what happened in Texas.
He's ignoring all those.
there was an incident in Maryland shortly after the Parkland shooting down in Florida.
And the officer walked in.
He engaged the shooter, didn't hit it.
But the shooter suddenly took his focus off of the school kids he was trying to kill,
focusing on the law enforcement guy and it allowed the law enforcement.
officers to then re-engage him and take him down and arrest him. There's been numerous
results of that. The thing about the school resource officers in particular, remember, school
resource officers were put into schools originally to talk to kids about drugs, to stop bullying,
to help with all those kind of things. They were not there to be security guards. In most
cases they were older law enforcement officers probably you know this is the
the last year or two before they retired they were very wise experienced nice
people good with the kids and their mindset was not you know take down the
shooter kind of thing that's what happened in down in Parkland that's what's
happened in several other places that I think this guy is using as his
proof for his case. And that's that's a old model for school resource officers. And frankly,
there's been a ton of folks who are some of the loudest advocates for gun control who are saying,
actually, it's bad even having policemen with guns in the school at all. They either need to go in
they're unarmed or they shouldn't go in at all. There's several bills in Congress right now put forward
by gun control advocating politicians who want to disarm police anywhere on school grounds.
How in the world they come up with that one? I don't know. That's kind of loony.
But it's so I reject his argument. He's using limited examples, ignoring anything that's counter to his position.
And no offense, but Mr. Sociologist, I'd like to see your creds for security.
I really take your opinions that seriously.
Okay, well, as you mentioned, of course, the security at Parkland did not intervene and was later
fired.
And I think, you know, as we look at the delays in the police response, there's a lot of
questions swirling about, did something similar occur here?
But at the same time, you know, we also know that law enforcement doesn't really get a fair
trial by media in the U.S. So as we're learning more about this case, what should people be
keeping in mind as the news is coming out? Well, first thing is that all that news is almost always
incomplete and generally somewhat contrived because they want to have a good narrative to go forward.
there's been a lot of outrage on the TV news from commentators who frankly had absolutely no facts whatsoever.
I understand the outrage and a tragedy like this, but if you're going to go on TV and talk about it,
you know, you do have some responsibility to try and gather the facts first and understand that the facts are going to change as we get more and more information.
So I would say, please be patient. Let the investigations go forward. You know, it's not something that's being investigated by the Uvaldi police alone. There's law enforcement at every level all the way up to the federal levels that are all looking into this, trying to find out exactly what happened in this specific situation, and how do the lessons from that.
situation apply in the larger context for everyone. I think we're going to find things were not
done as well as they could have been. But before we start, as I say, before we start hanging
anybody in the public square, let's get the full set of information, put a little reasoned
analysis behind it, and then decide how we make things better. Law enforcement, in my experience,
to a humongous extent, you know, their fathers and mothers as well as anybody else,
a lot of those Border Patrol agents had kids in that school.
It's not like any of these folks were disconnected, but we need to find out exactly the chain of
events, exactly the orders that were given, why they were given, and then make a judgment
if those decisions were sound or if they were flawed.
If they're flawed, then we need to make changes.
That may include making changes in personnel.
But let's let the process play itself out so we do this right and we fix things
rather than just stomping our feet and making things worse.
All right. Steve, thanks so much for joining us again.
It's my pleasure. Thank you for having me.
And that'll do it for today's bonus episode.
Just a reminder that we will not have a show this Monday and observance of Memorial Day.
Thank you again for listening and we'll be back with you on Tuesday.
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