$27 billion Uvalde class-action lawsuit likely to target law enforcement, gun manufacturer for 'deliberate, conscious disregard' for human life



A class-action lawsuit on behalf of the victims and survivors of the Uvalde school shooting that occurred three months ago will soon be filed, and it is likely to name as defendants several law enforcement agencies and at least two firearms businesses.

Back on May 24, a shooter shut himself inside two adjoining classrooms in Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, and terrorized children and teachers for over an hour before law enforcement breached the door and killed him. In all, 19 students and two teachers were murdered in the attack, and several others were wounded.

Last week, Charles Bonner of the Law Offices of Bonner & Bonner — located in the Bay Area — announced that he would soon file a $27 billion lawsuit on behalf of the Uvalde victims. He has been meeting with survivors and family members at a local church to discuss a possible lawsuit which will hold law enforcement accountable for their actions that day.

"Up to right now, there's been no accountability, there's no justice for those 19 children and the two teachers," said Daniel Myers, the pastor of Tabernacle of Worship church where Bonner and the victims have met.

Defendants in the lawsuit will likely include: Uvalde city police, Uvalde police chief Pedro "Pete" Arredondo, sheriffs, Texas Rangers, Border Patrol, and the Texas Department of Public Safety. The lawsuit will also likely target Daniel Defense, which manufactured the gun used by the shooter, and Oasis Outback, which sold it to him. Members of the Uvalde school board and city council may also be named.

Bonner claims that by their actions — and in many cases, their inactions — these individuals, businesses, and law enforcement agencies violated the victims' constitutional rights.

"People have a right to life under the 14th Amendment, and what we’ve seen here is that the law enforcement agencies have shown a deliberate, conscious disregard of the life," said Bonner, who is also representing victims of the recent mass shooting in Buffalo, New York.

The civil rights lawsuit will be "one-of-a-kind in the whole world," Bonner continued.

The lawsuit is expected to be filed soon.

"Now it's time for all of us to stand up and demand change and protection," a statement on the Bonner & Bonner website says.

Other attorneys from a separate California law firm are preparing to file a federal lawsuit regarding the shooting on behalf of three individual families. Though it will not be a class-action suit, it will likely include many or all of the same defendants as the class-action suit filed by Bonner.

South Carolina sheriff will equip schools with breaching kits to prevent another Uvalde massacre



A South Carolina county is equipping schools with new tools to bolster safety and ensure that nothing like the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, can happen in that community.

The Cherokee County Sheriff's Office is making breaching kits available to schools and sheriff's deputies, important tools that Sheriff Steve Mueller told WSPA-TV can help neutralize a potential threat.

The kits come with axes, pry bars, and cutting tools that are useful for breaking through barricaded entryways to classrooms or other school areas.

“We can breach that classroom or that door as quickly as possible to get in and stop or neutralize a threat,” Mueller said.

The nation was shocked in May when a deranged gunman in Uvalde, Texas, gained access to Robb Elementary School and massacred a room full of school children. The gunman shut himself inside a classroom and murdered 19 students and two teachers. Responding police officers in body armor waited in the hallway outside for more than an hour before breaching the classroom and neutralizing the shooter.

Mueller said that equipping his deputies and school resource officers with breaching kits will prevent the same mistakes that led to children bleeding out and dying while waiting for help.

“We want to take these breaching kits and we want to put those in the hands of all our SROs, as well as our other officers who are out patrolling during school hours. And we’re actually going to try to place them in all the schools,” the sheriff told WSPA.

He noted that SWAT teams use breaching kits in hostile situations and can save valuable time responding to a threat.

“Tragically, because after what we saw in Texas, we can’t sit back and wait 30 minutes to an hour plus for breaching to arrive on the scene,” he added.

Demand for breaching kits has surged as law enforcement agencies nationwide are updating their policies in response to the Uvalde massacre. Mueller said his department is looking at ways to buy each tool in the kit individually instead of buying the kits whole, which can cost anywhere from $650-800 per kit.

“So, we’re looking at piecing these out from our local Lowe’s, Ace Hardware, and buying the individual pieces and we think we can save a little bit of money by buying these pieces individually, versus a kit,” he said.

The sheriff said he is asking local authorities to approve more funding for his office to bolster school safety.

“We want parents to have confidence in law enforcement, that we’re going to protect their children and we’re going to protect them at all costs,” he said.

Watch:

Uvalde school principal reinstated after review, will now focus on 'healing process,' attorney says



Robb Elementary School Principal Mandy Gutierrez has been "fully reinstated" after a three-day suspension, her attorney said Thursday.

Gutierrez was suspended without pay on Monday after a Texas House investigation into the May 24 massacre of 19 students and two teachers in Uvalde, Texas, found that she was aware of security problems at the school prior to the shooting but had failed to address them.

But the suspension was lifted and Gutierrez permitted to return to work after a review, her attorney Ricardo Cedillo said, according to the Texas Tribune.

Cedillo released a letter from Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District Superintendent Hal Harrell informing Guttierez that she would be allowed to return to work on July 28.

"Thank you for responding to our request for information by submitting your response to the House Investigative Report," the letter states.

"As we discussed today, with mutual agreement, you will continue to serve the District in an administrative capacity," Harrell wrote. "Thank you for helping us as we work through the transition. We look forward to a successful 2022-2023."

A special legislative report found that among numerous "systemic failures" in the police response to the deadly shooting, Robb Elementary School had a recurring problem with maintaining locks and doors. The report identified a "culture of noncompliance" for locked doors "which turned out to be fatal" after the gunman entered the building through an improperly locked door and then entered a classroom, where he slaughtered his victims.

Gutierrez and at least two other school employees had known the lock wasn't working properly, but no work order was ever placed to fix it, according to state House investigators.

However, Gutierrez rebuffed the findings of the report in a letter to the House committee investigating the shooting. She provided evidence that the classroom door locks properly and said she was trained not to use the school's public address system during an active shooting situation.

“It is unfair and inaccurate to conclude that I ever [became] complacent on any security issue of Robb Elementary,” Gutierrez said.

Asked by Axios if Gutierrez felt vindicated after her reinstatement, Cedillo replied: "Vindication is not what she sought. She sought merely to be allowed to continue her efforts to assist in the healing process for the families in the community she loves.

"She understands and respects that the grieving process might involve anger. That is a natural reaction and she respects and empathizes with everything those affected are going through," he continued.

"She prays for the strength to focus on the healing process that will be prolonged and probably never-ending," Cedillo added.

Uvalde City Council says all 25 city officers who responded to school massacre will be investigated



The Uvalde City Council said Tuesday it will investigate every city police officer who responded to the shooting massacre at Robb Elementary School on May 24.

Jesse Prado, a former Austin police detective, has been appointed to lead the investigations, the city council announced. He will conduct individual interviews with the 25 officers on the police force who went to the shooting scene, CNN reported.

This latest action from the city council comes after a legislative report identified "systemic failures and egregious poor decision making" in response to the attacker who killed 19 children and two teachers while hundreds of responding officers failed to stop the gunman.

"This investigation is looking at every single officer and what his actions — what he did, what our policy says — and basically, we're gonna get a report on everybody," Councilman Ernest "Chip" King III said, according to CNN.

King added that the city "will act" on Prado's report and hold accountable those responsible for the failed police response.

"He's gonna be conducting the investigation and we're gonna let the investigation go, see what he determines, but everybody that's Uvalde PD that was there will be held accountable for their actions," he said.

A Texas House investigation condemned what the lawmakers called "an overall lackadaisical approach" by federal, state, and local authorities to the shooting. There were 376 responding law enforcement officers at Robb Elementary School, yet the report found that it took authorities 77 minutes from the time the gunman entered the school building to breach the classroom he had occupied and neutralize him.

The report also said that numerous law enforcement officials abandoned police protocol and training for active shooter situations.

"They failed to prioritize saving the lives of innocent victims over their own safety," the report said.

The Uvalde City Council has already placed Lt. Mariano Pargas, who was the police department's acting chief on the day of the massacre, on administrative leave pending an investigation into whether he should have assumed command.

Additionally, the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District has put its chief of police, Pete Arredondo, on administrative leave and suspended Robb Elementary School principal Mandy Gutierrez, who was found to have been aware of security issues with improperly locking doors but failed to act.

Some members of the public who attended the city council meeting called for all the responding city officers to be suspended or placed on desk duty, CNN reported.

"I know parents want answers. Nobody wants to give those answers more than I do on the city council," Councilman Hector R. Luevano told attendees.

"I'm a former police officer, so I have some insight into actions that need to be taken," he added. "I can assure the families in this community that I'm going to do everything within my power as a member of this council to give you the answers that you need to hear."

"If there's any officer that's in violation of any policy or procedure that they needed to act on and did not and might have caused these children to die, these teachers to die, I can assure you, heads are going to roll," Luevano said.

The city council announced the investigator should complete his work within two months, at which time Prado will make recommendations on potential disciplinary actions to the council.

Uvalde school principal placed on administrative leave as parents demand accountability



Robb Elementary School principal Mandy Gutierrez was placed on administrative leave Monday, her attorney said.

Gutierrez was suspended with pay after a special legislative investigation into the May 24 massacre of 19 students and two teachers in Uvalde, Texas, found that she was aware of security problems at the school prior to the shooting but had failed to address them, ABC News reported.

Her attorney, Ricardo Cedillo, did not give a reason for her suspension in a "terse" statement to the Associated Press.

School district officials have also declined to comment on the suspension.

A report by the Texas state House found that among numerous "systemic failures," Robb Elementary School had a recurring problem with maintaining locks and doors. Amid questions regarding whether properly locked doors would have prevented the shooter from entering the building or classrooms, the report found there was a "culture of noncompliance" for locked doors "which turned out to be fatal."

The door the shooter used to get inside the building wasn't locked, and the door to one of the classrooms he entered was probably not locked, the report said. Gutierrez and at least two other school employees had known the lock wasn't working properly, but no work order was ever placed to fix it.

Gutierrez's suspension follows that of school district police chief Pete Arredondo, who was placed on unpaid administrative leave in June. The Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District has recommended that Arredondo be fired.

Arredondo has been blamed for the failed police response to the shooting. He was incident commander while the gunman shot up a classroom but failed to follow standard police protocol, resulting in children and teachers dying while officers who were equipped to storm the classroom waited outside instead.

The district school board met Monday and approved a three-week postponement to the start of the 2022-2023 school year until Sept. 6 so that officials could improve school security and provide emotional and support services to students, ABC News reported.

Family members of the victims went to the school board meeting and complained that district officials are continuing to be unresponsive and have not held anyone accountable for their failures.

Brett Cross, whose daughter Uziyah Garcia was murdered in the massacre, told board members that only one of those present had reached out to his family, according to ABC News.

"You care more about your damn selves than you do for our children," Cross said, demanding that someone on the board take responsibility for the failures. "Why have y'all still not taken accountability for y'all's mess-ups? Can any one of y'all look me dead in the eyes and say, 'Look, we messed up?'"

Eventually, board member Luis Fernandez admitted that "everybody messed up."

Bodycam video shows police officer husband of elementary teacher shot in Uvalde being held back from apparently trying to rescue her amid mass killing



Bodycam video shows the police officer husband of a teacher shot at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, being held back from apparently trying to rescue her amid the mass killing at the school in May.

Fox News published a clip showing Ruben Ruiz — his gun drawn — making his way past other law enforcement personnel outside a classroom.

At that point, a voice is heard calling out to "Ruben" in an apparent effort to get him to stop.

"She said she’s shot, Tony," Ruiz tells another law enforcement official, Fox News said. The video shows a law enforcement official placing his hand on Ruiz's shoulder and directing him back down the hallway and away from the classroom.

What's the rest of the story?

TheBlaze reported last month that Eva Mireles — Ruiz's wife and a teacher who was fatally shot — called Ruiz and told him she was dying. But when Ruiz tried to rescue her, he was detained, his gun was taken, and he was removed from the scene, according to Col. Steven McCraw, director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, NBC News reported.

Mireles, who taught 4th graders, was one of two adults killed in the massacre, along with 19 children. Ruiz is an Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District officer, the network added.

McCraw — who spoke during a Texas Senate hearing in June regarding the police response to the massacre — described what Mireles said to her husband and what happened to him when he tried to take action, the network said.

“We got an officer, Officer Ruiz, whose wife had called him and said she [had] been shot, and she’s dying,” McCraw said, according to video of the hearing. “What happened to him was he tried to move forward into the hallway ... he was detained, and they took his gun away from him and escorted him off the scene.”

Officer husband of Uvalde victim tried to help but was detained, DPS chief saysyoutu.be

McCraw did not say which agency had removed Ruiz from school grounds, KWTX-TV reported.

'I keep telling myself that this isn’t real'

Adalynn Ruiz, the couple's daughter, penned a tribute to her late mother on Facebook.

"Mom, you are a hero. I keep telling myself that this isn’t real. I just want to hear your voice," she wrote, adding that “I want everything back. I want you to come back to me mom. I miss you more than words can explain."

Uvalde to honor teacher who gave life protecting kids in school shootingyoutu.be

Shot Uvalde teacher called police officer husband, told him she was dying. He tried to rescue her but was stopped, removed from scene — and his gun was taken.



Eva Mireles — a teacher who was fatally shot during last month's massacre at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas — called her police officer husband and told him she was dying, but when he tried to rescue her, he was detained, his gun was taken, and he was removed from the scene, according to Col. Steven McCraw, director of the state Department of Public Safety, NBC News reported.

What are the details?

McCraw — speaking Tuesday during a Texas Senate hearing on the police response to the massacre — described what Mireles said to her husband, Officer Ruben Ruiz, and what happened to him when he tried to take action, the network said.

“We got an officer, Officer Ruiz, whose wife had called him and said she [had] been shot, and she’s dying,” McCraw said, according to video of the hearing. “What happened to him was he tried to move forward into the hallway ... he was detained, and they took his gun away from him and escorted him off the scene.”

Officer husband of Uvalde victim tried to help but was detained, DPS chief sayswww.youtube.com

Mireles, who taught fourth-graders, was one of two teachers killed in the May 24 massacre that also took the lives of 19 students, NBC News said. Ruiz is an Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District officer, the network added.

McCraw did not say which agency removed Ruiz from school grounds, KWTX-TV reported.

'I keep telling myself that this isn’t real'

Adalynn Ruiz, the couple's daughter, penned a tribute to her late mother on Facebook.

"Mom, you are a hero. I keep telling myself that this isn’t real. I just want to hear your voice," she wrote, adding that “I want everything back. I want you to come back to me mom. I miss you more than words can explain."

Anything else?

McCraw on Tuesday also called the police response an "abject failure."

"Three minutes after the suspect entered the west building, there was a sufficient number of armed officers wearing body armor to isolate, distract, and neutralize the subject," he explained. "The only thing stopping a hallway of dedicated officers from entering Room 111, and 112, was the on-scene commander, who decided to place the lives of officers before the lives of children."

McCraw repeatedly condemned Uvalde school district police Chief Pete Arredondo, the on-scene commander who decided not to immediately engage the gunman.

"The officers had weapons; the children had none," McCraw said. "The officers had body armor; the children had none. The officers had training; the subject had none. One hour, 14 minutes and 8 seconds. That’s how long children waited, and the teachers waited, in Room 111 to be rescued.”

NBC News added that a new image from inside the school taken 19 minutes after the gunman started shooting appeared to show officers with more firepower and protective gear than previously thought.

Uvalde to honor teacher who gave life protecting kids in school shootingyoutu.be

Uvalde school police chief says he didn't know that he was in charge during the child massacre and explains why he didn't know about 911 calls from children inside



The Uvalde school police chief who has been lambasted for the lack of police response in the child massacre said that he didn't know he was in charge at the time and explained how he didn't know about 911 calls coming from inside the school.

Pete Arredondo, the chief of police for the Uvalde school district, made the revelations in an interview with the Texas Tribune that was published Thursday.

He went through a moment by moment recollection of what he did during the hour that the shooter was locked in with children at Robb Elementary School and kept killing them.

Arredondo assumed that some other officer or official had taken control of the larger response. He took on the role of a front-line responder.

He said he never considered himself the scene’s incident commander and did not give any instruction that police should not attempt to breach the building. DPS officials have described Arredondo as the incident commander and said Arredondo made the call to stand down and treat the incident as a “barricaded suspect,” which halted the attempt to enter the room and take down the shooter. “I didn’t issue any orders,” Arredondo said. “I called for assistance and asked for an extraction tool to open the door.”

Arredondo also cleared up the mystery surrounding why police didn't take more aggressive measures to save the children inside the school who were calling 911 and begging for help.

He said that he had rushed off to the incident and left his radios behind, which limited his access to information from other police.

To Arredondo, the choice was logical. An armed killer was loose on the campus of the elementary school. Every second mattered. He wanted both hands free to hold his gun, ready to aim and fire quickly and accurately if he encountered the gunman.

He said that when he made his way to the two classrooms of the incident that he had assumed the gunman had barricaded himself in. According to his account, no one in the hallway told him about the 911 calls being made from inside the rooms, and he had no radios to become informed about the calls.

A police tactics expert told the Tribune that the chief being without a radio was inexplicable and "inconceivable."

Arredondo went on to defend the actions of the police and said they did not hesitate to defend the teachers and children.

“Not a single responding officer ever hesitated, even for a moment, to put themselves at risk to save the children,” Arredondo said. “We responded to the information that we had and had to adjust to whatever we faced. Our objective was to save as many lives as we could, and the extraction of the students from the classrooms by all that were involved saved over 500 of our Uvalde students and teachers before we gained access to the shooter and eliminated the threat.”

The Tribune reported that Arredondo has received death threats and has had to go into hiding over the police response to the massacre.

He was also raised in Uvalde, and had attended Robb Elementary School as a boy.

Here's a local news report about the unbelievable statement:

Uvalde school police chief says he did not know he was in command during shootingwww.youtube.com

New York enacts sweeping new gun ownership restrictions



New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signed a sweeping package of gun control bills into law Monday, calling gun violence "a disease that is tearing our nation apart."

The state legislature passed and Hochul signed into law 10 bills that will implement new restrictions on gun ownership, including raising the age to purchase a semiautomatic rifle in New York from 18 to 21 years old. Democratic lawmakers claim the new gun control measures will close "loopholes" in existing laws that were exposed by the deadly mass shootings in Buffalo, New York and Uvalde, Texas last month.

In addition to raising the age to purchase a rifle, lawmakers banned the sale of bulletproof armor for anyone not in law enforcement, strengthened the state's red flag law to take guns away from mentally unstable people, and introduced new requirements for social media companies to monitor and report "hateful conduct" on their platforms.

"Gun violence is an epidemic that is tearing our country apart. Thoughts and prayers won't fix this, but taking strong action will," Hochul said in a statement.

"I am proud to sign a comprehensive bill package that prohibits the sale of semiautomatic weapons to people under 21, bans body armor sales outside of people in select professions, closes critical gun law loopholes and strengthens our Red Flag Law to keep guns away from dangerous people—new measures that I believe will save lives," she added.

\u201cGun violence is a disease that is plaguing our country.\u00a0\n\nIn New York, we act boldly and we lead.\n\nThank you to @AndreaSCousins, @CarlHeastie, and all the advocates for their work to quickly pass this transformative package of gun legislation that will protect all New Yorkers.\u201d
— Governor Kathy Hochul (@Governor Kathy Hochul) 1654565817

Several of the new laws are specific responses to the deadly mass shooting at a Buffalo supermarket, where an 18-year-old gunman with racist motivations allegedly shot and killed 10 black people and wounded three others.

The firearms used in the deadly shooting were purchased legally. Now the law prohibits an 18-year-old from purchasing a rifle. "No 18-year-old can walk in on their birthday and walk out with an AR-15," Hochul told reporters Monday. "Those days are over."

Under the strengthened red flag law, law enforcement is now required to seek an order from a judge to seize the weapons of anyone they believe may pose a threat to themselves or others. The alleged shooter threatened to commit a murder-suicide at his high school in 2021, but no one sought an extreme risk protection order to remove his access to firearms under existing law at the time.

Hochul praised state lawmakers for working to pass these new gun restrictions and urged Congress "to follow our lead and take immediate action to pass meaningful gun violence prevention measures."

There are several gun control bills under consideration in Congress but most of the measures preferred by anti-gun activists do not have enough support to pass. A bipartisan group of U.S. senators led by Sens. John Cornyn (R-Texas) and Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) are trying to reach a compromise on a federal bill that would incentivize state governments to adopt red flag laws similar to ones in New York and Florida. Any compromise will need 10 Republicans to sign on to overcome a filibuster with 60 votes.

Matthew McConaughey calls for 'gun responsibility' not gun control, goes on to demand gun control



Academy Award-winning actor Matthew McConaughey attempted to appeal to both sides of the gun control debate this week by issuing a call for nationwide "gun responsibility" rather than gun control in an op-ed for USA Today. Yet, while not going nearly as far as Democratic lawmakers and anti-gun advocates would have liked him to, the celebrity and Uvalde, Texas native ended up pushing for the adoption of several unproven gun control measures to curb gun violence in the country.

What are the details?

McConaughey, like many Americans, was forced once again to weigh arguments in the national debate over firearms in response to a recent spate of mass shootings in Buffalo, Uvalde, and elsewhere. Particularly as a hometown kid from the site of a horrific elementary school massacre that left 19 children and three adults dead last month, the actor likely felt compelled to "do something," as Democrats in Washington routinely say.

He began his op-ed by acknowledging that "law-abiding Americans have a Second Amendment right, enshrined by our founders, to bear arms," but noted he also believes "we have a cultural obligation to take steps toward slowing down the senseless killing of our children." And while "the debate about gun control has delivered nothing but status quo," he suggested a new approach: "gun responsibility."

The actor acknowledged that a litany of other factors — such as the lack of mental health care, adequate school security, sensationalized media coverage, and the decay of American values — played major parts in manufacturing gun violence, and needed to be addressed. But without "the luxury of time," he argued, we need to focus our time and energy on adopting policies that will have an immediate effect on gun violence.

Such policies, he said, included requiring background checks for all gun purchases, implementing nationwide "red flag laws," raising the age limit for buying an "assault rifle" (no such thing) to 21, and instituting a waiting period before the purchase of such weapons.

Below is McConaughey's full list of proposals:

1. All gun purchases should require a background check. Eighty-eight percent of Americans support this, including a lot of responsible gun owning Texans. … I’ve met them. Roof, who killed nine people in a black church in South Carolina in 2015, got his pistol without a completed background check due to a legal technicality. The system failed. Gun control activists call this a loophole. I call it incompetence.

2. Unless you are in the military, you should be 21 years old to purchase an assault rifle. I’m not talking about 12-gauge shotguns or lever-action hunting rifles. I’m talking about the weapon of choice for mass murderers, AR-15s. The killer in my hometown of Uvalde purchased two AR-15s for his eighteenth birthday, just days before he killed 19 students and two teachers. He obeyed the law. Had the law been different, perhaps I wouldn’t be writing this today.

3. Red Flag Laws should be the law of the land. These measures, which are already in effect in 19 states and Washington, D.C., empower loved ones or law enforcement to petition courts to temporarily prevent individuals who may be a threat to themselves or others from purchasing or accessing firearms. These laws must respect due process, judicial review, and hold account individuals who may abuse such laws.

4. We need to institute a national waiting period for assault rifles. Individuals often purchase weapons in a fit of rage, harming themselves or others. Studies show that mandatory waiting periods reduced homicides by 17 percent. Gun suicides account for the majority of U.S. gun deaths. A waiting period to purchase an assault rifle is an acceptable sacrifice for responsible gun owners when it can prevent a mass shooting crime of passion or suicide.

He added that he understands that these policies will not solve all of the problems related to gun violence and mass shootings, but said if they can curb some, "they're worth it."

What else?

"There is a difference between control and responsibility," McConaughey argued. "The first is a mandate that can infringe on our right; the second is a duty that will preserve it. There is no constitutional barrier to gun responsibility. Keeping firearms out of the hands of dangerous people is not only the responsible thing to do, it is the best way to protect the Second Amendment. We can do both."

But many law-abiding, gun-owning Americans will likely see only blurred lines in his argument. The measures McConaughey advocates for look a lot like knee-jerk reactions frequently offered by progressives, regardless of his stated respect for the Second Amendment. Just as well, all have their own practica and constitutional pitfalls.

For example, waiting periods and age requirements sound like simple, easy solutions, but for what other rights enshrined in the Constitution are Americans required to wait before exercising? And what happens when 21-year-olds commit atrocities with guns after waiting to purchase their weapons. Will the ticker once again be moved?

Universal background checks are another popular proposal offered by gun control proponents. But it, too, can be situationally impractical, nearly unenforceable, and the most likely to be ignored by the very criminals it intends to stop.

Some argue red flag laws carry the same pitfalls. While it sounds easy enough to simply identify the unstable or irresponsible members of society that shouldn't be trusted with guns, the reality is often much more difficult to assess. The Uvalde shooter, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos, had displayed bizarre behavior that resulted in him being a societal outcast but none of it rose to the level of criminal behavior.

Anything else?

In an interview with CNN's Dana Bash last month, Republican Rep. Dan Crenshaw (Texas) provided some necessary clarity on a number of the proposals raised by McConaughey. He called the so-called solutions bad policies since they likely would primarily serve to infringe the rights of millions of law-abiding citizens while doing comparatively little to stop mass shootings.

"It's an outcome problem," Crenshaw told Bask. "I don't think [these proposals] would have the outcome people think they would have."

Crenshaw noted that people often have misconceptions about universal background checks, which really mean that background checks would be required for private gun transactions. Background checks are already required by law for all gun transactions between a party and a licensed firearms dealer.

"[It] means that I can no longer sell a gun to my friend. If my neighbor — let's say her husband is gone for the week and she wants to borrow my gun, that would make us both felons," Crenshaw eplained, adding that "the people who are least likely to adhere to a universal background check are the criminals who intend harm."

He also questioned the need for red flag laws, saying, "What you’re essentially trying to do with a red flag law is enforce the law before the law has been broken, and it’s a really difficult thing to do. It’s difficult to assess whether somebody is a threat."

"Now, if they're such a threat that they are threatening someone with a weapon already, well then, they've already broken the law. So why do we need this other law?" he added.