$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.

'Systemic failures': New report finds nearly 400 law enforcement officers at Uvalde school shooting, blames all agencies for 'lackadaisical approach'



Nearly 400 law enforcement officers were at the Robb Elementary School during the Uvalde school shooting that resulted in the deaths of 19 students and two teachers, according to a new report.

An investigative committee from the Texas House of Representatives released a 77-page report regarding the police response to the Uvalde shooting on Sunday.

The report stated, "There is no one to whom we can attribute malice or ill motives. Instead, we found systemic failures and egregious poor decision making."

The report regarding the May 24 massacre found "an overall lackadaisical approach” by federal, state, and local authorities at the deadly crime scene.

The investigators said there were "shortcomings and failures of the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District and of various agencies and officers of law enforcement."

There were 376 law enforcement officers at Robb Elementary School during the shooting – including 149 from the United States Border Patrol, 14 from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and 91 from the Texas Department of Public Safety. There were also 25 responders from Uvalde Police Department, 16 from the Uvalde County Sheriff's Office, 16 from the San Antonio Police Department (SWAT), and five officers from the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District Police.

Despite the massive law enforcement presence, the mass shooter was not neutralized until 77 minutes after the gunman entered Robb Elementary School.

The committee's report noted, "The attacker fired most of his shots and likely murdered most of his innocent victims before any responder set foot in the building. Of the approximately 142 rounds the attacker fired inside the building, it is almost certain that he rapidly fired over 100 of those rounds before any officer entered."

The investigation also found that law enforcement disregarded their own active shooter training protocols.

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

The committee also faulted better-trained law enforcement agencies for not taking leadership away Pete Arredondo – the former Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District police chief.

"In this crisis, no responder seized the initiative to establish an incident command post," the committee report said. "Despite an obvious atmosphere of chaos, the ranking officers of other responding agencies did not approach the Uvalde CISD chief of police or anyone else perceived to be in command to point out the lack of and need for a command post, or to offer that specific assistance."

The committee also discovered that school staff broke safeguards, such as leaving doors unlocked and propping them open with wedges or rocks.

(WARNING: Graphic content)

Exclusive Uvalde video shows school shooting, police in hallway after shooter entered classroom www.youtube.com

Uvalde school police chief to resign from city council



Pete Arredondo – the highly criticized Uvalde school police chief – will resign from his city council position, according to a new report.

A few weeks before the mass shooting on May 24 that killed 19 children and two teachers at the Robb Elementary School, Arredondo was elected to the Uvalde city council. He was sworn into the position on May 31. However, Arredondo will reportedly step down from the position in the Texas town.

"After much consideration, I regret to inform those who voted for me that I have decided to step down as a member of the city council for District 3. The mayor, the city council, and the city staff must continue to move forward without distractions. I feel this is the best decision for Uvalde,” Arredondo told Uvalde Leader-News.

“As we continue to grieve over the tragedy that occurred on May 24th, we pray for the families involved and our community," Arredondo told the local newspaper. "Uvalde has a rich history of loving and supporting thy neighbor and we must continue to do so. In speaking with other communities that have had similar tragedies, the guidance has been the same… continue to support the families, continue to support our community, and definitely, to keep our faith."

Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin said the city has yet to receive a resignation letter from Arredondo, but McLaughlin called it "the right thing to do," Fox News reported.

Following the deadly school shooting, Arredondo had requested an extended leave from the city council. However, city council denied his request during a meeting held on June 21.

The chief of the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District police department was placed on administrative leave on June 22. The day prior, Department of Public Safety Director Steve McCraw told a state Senate committee that police officers could have ended the deadly school massacre within minutes. However, under Arredondo's command, the mass shooter was not neutralized until 77 minutes after the gunman entered Robb Elementary School.

Arrendondo earns an annual salary of $90,750 as the chief of the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District police department, according to Uvalde Leader-News.

A report from last month stated that a Uvalde police officer passed up an opportunity to open fire on the school shooter. The report also said that law enforcement never tried to open the classroom door where the gunman was.

Uvalde police never tried to open doors to classrooms where shooter was, officer passed up shooting gunman before he entered school: Reports



New reports reveal that a Uvalde police officer passed up an opportunity to open fire on the Texas school shooter and that law enforcement never tried to open the classroom door where the gunman was.

The New York Times reported that a Uvalde police officer could have shot Salvador Ramos before he entered Robb Elementary School.

"At least two law enforcement cars arrived in close succession at the school," according to the New York Times. "One was driven by an officer from the small police force that patrols Uvalde’s schools. Another arrived less than a minute later, at 11:32 a.m., with officers from the Uvalde Police Department."

At the time, the gunman was reportedly outside the school – firing into the building and toward a funeral home. Responding officers believed the shooter was firing at them, according to Chief Deputy Sheriff Ricardo Rios of Zavala County.

The two officers took cover behind a police cruiser.

"They wanted to return fire, he said, but held off," the Times stated, adding that one of the officers was armed with a long gun.

Rios said, "I asked him, ‘Why didn’t you shoot? Why didn’t you engage?’ And that’s when he told me about the background. According to the officers, they didn’t engage back because in the background there was kids playing and they were scared of hitting the kids."

The opportunity to take out the shooter purportedly only had a window of a few seconds.

Rios understood the decision, and added, "The Ranger who took my statement even said: 'It's come to the point where we’re second-guessing ourselves shooting somebody because we’re scared. Every bullet has our names.'"

A report from the San Antonio Express-News claimed that police officers never attempted to open the doors at the Robb Elementary School – where the shooter was.

"Surveillance footage shows that police never tried to open a door to two classrooms at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde in the 77 minutes between the time a gunman entered the rooms and massacred 21 people and officers finally breached the door and killed him," the San Antonio Express-News reported, citing a law enforcement source involved in the investigation. "Investigators believe the 18-year-old gunman who killed 19 children and two teachers at the school on May 24 could not have locked the door to the connected classrooms from the inside."

That source allegedly said that police may have assumed that the school doors were locked. However, the doors are reportedly only locked or unlocked from the outside.

The report claimed that police officers could have tried to open doors instead of attempting to locate keys to gain entry.

Uvalde CISD Police Chief Pete Arredondo allegedly tried to obtain keys to open the school doors.

The Texas Tribune previously reported, "The extrication tools never materialized, but Arredondo had also asked for keys that could open the door. Eventually, a janitor provided six keys. Arredondo tried each on a door adjacent to the room where the gunman was, but it didn’t open."

The San Antonio Express-News reported, "Regardless, officers had access the entire time to a 'halligan' a crowbar-like tool that could have opened the door to the classrooms even if it was locked, the source said."

The Times added, "Ramos entered Robb Elementary at 11:33 a.m. that day through an exterior door that a teacher had pulled shut but that didn’t lock automatically as it was supposed to, indicating another malfunction in door locks at the school."

The San Antonio Express-News noted, "Police finally breached the door to classroom 111 and killed Ramos at 12:50 p.m. Whether the door was unlocked the entire time remains under investigation."

20 senators announce framework of bipartisan deal for new gun control measures



A bipartisan group of 20 senators – including 10 Republicans – announced framework for a deal to implement new gun control measures. The gun legislation was quickly put together in the wake of the Uvalde shooting – which ended in 19 students and two teachers being shot dead at the Robb Elementary School in Texas.

“Today, we are announcing a commonsense, bipartisan proposal to protect America’s children, keep our schools safe and reduce the threat of violence across our country,” the group of senators said in a statement. “Families are scared, and it is our duty to come together and get something done that will help restore their sense of safety and security in their communities.”

"Our plan increases needed mental health resources, improves school safety and support for students, and helps ensure dangerous criminals and those who are adjudicated as mentally ill can’t purchase weapons," the joint statement read.

"Most importantly, our plan saves lives while also protecting the constitutional rights of law-abiding Americans," the senators stated. "We look forward to earning broad, bipartisan support and passing our commonsense proposal into law."

The framework of the gun control package would expand background checks for firearm purchasers under the age of 21 to have their juvenile records and mental health records reviewed.

The deal would include a provision to close the so-called "boyfriend loophole." Convicted domestic violence abusers would be included in the National Instant Criminal Background Check System.

The legislation would offer incentives for states to implement "red flag" laws to enable police or family members to prevent someone who is deemed a risk to themselves or others from having guns.

The agreement would implement harsher penalties on "straw purchasing" of guns, and those who traffic firearms.

The framework includes funding for school safety measures and mental health resources.

The final bill hasn't been written yet, according to sources familiar with the negotiations.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said he was "pleased" that "Congress is on the path to take meaningful action to address gun violence" for "the first time in nearly 30 years." He vowed to put the bill on the floor "swiftly."

"After an unrelenting wave of gun-related suicides and homicides, including mass shootings, the Senate is poised to act on commonsense reforms to protect Americans where they live, where they shop, and where they learn," Schumer said. "We must move swiftly to advance this legislation because if a single life can be saved it is worth the effort."

Shortly after the deal was announced, President Joe Biden issued a statement proclaiming that he would sign the legislation immediately.

"Obviously, it does not do everything that I think is needed, but it reflects important steps in the right direction, and would be the most significant gun safety legislation to pass Congress in decades," President Biden said. "With bipartisan support, there are no excuses for delay, and no reason why it should not quickly move through the Senate and the House."

"Each day that passes, more children are killed in this country: the sooner it comes to my desk, the sooner I can sign it, and the sooner we can use these measures to save lives," Biden concluded.

With the Senate deadlocked at 50-50, the bill has a good chance of passing with the support of the 10 GOP senators.

The Democratic senators who signed the proposal:

  • Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut
  • Cory Booker of New Jersey
  • Chris Coons of Delaware
  • Martin Heinrich of New Mexico
  • Mark Kelly of Arizona
  • Angus King of Maine, an independent who caucuses with the Democrats;
  • Joe Manchin of West Virginia
  • Chris Murphy of Connecticut
  • Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona
  • Debbie Stabenow of Michigan

The Republican senators who endorsed the framework:

  • Roy Blunt of Missouri
  • Richard Burr of North Carolina
  • John Cornyn of Texas
  • Bill Cassidy of Louisiana
  • Susan Collins of Maine
  • Lindsey Graham of South Carolina
  • Rob Portman of Ohio
  • Mitt Romney of Utah
  • Thom Tillis of North Carolina
  • Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania.

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.

'We're not going back!': Uvalde superintendent says students will never return to Robb Elementary School; school board declines to punish police chief



The Uvalde school board held a special meeting on Friday where the decision was made for students and staff to never return to the Robb Elementary School. The Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District board also took no action against the police chief who failed to confront the school shooter.

"We're not going back to that campus," said Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District Superintendent Hal Harrell at the meeting after a tearful parent said her second-grade daughter was traumatized and "deathly afraid" of going back to the school.

"We have plans for it to become something other than a school site," Harrell added.

During the special meeting of the board of trustees, Harrell said he expects to have a new location for the school in the "very near future."

Also at the meeting, the board decided to not take any disciplinary action against the school district's police chief.

Uvalde school district police chief Pete Arredondo failed to confront the shooter in the barricaded classroom.

Texas Department of Public Safety Director Steven McCraw declared that as many as 19 police officers had gathered outside the classroom with the gunman, but did not engage the shooter until approximately 75 minutes after the lethal attack began.

McCraw criticized Arredondo's decision to not engage the shooter, "From the benefit of hindsight, where I’m sitting now, of course it was not the right decision. It was the wrong decision, period.”

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said the decision not to engage the gunman sooner "may have" cost lives.

Arredondo said he didn't send his officers into the classroom because he believed the situation no longer involved an "active shooter."

However, multiple calls to 911 were made within the school – some were from students inside the classroom with the mass killer. Minutes before the shooter was killed, a girl in the school pleaded to a 911 dispatcher, "Please send the police now."

Two law enforcement sources informed the American-Statesman that Arredondo arrived at the shooting without his police radio and other critical equipment that may have impaired the police response to the rampage.

The gunman was finally shot and killed by Federal Border Patrol officers – who defied local law enforcement's order to stand down after waiting for 30 minutes, according to NBC News.

The 18-year-old killer murdered 19 students and two teachers.

The Texas Tribune noted that Arredondo failed to practice recommended active shooter tactics:

In modern active shooter tactics, police are trained to immediately take down gunmen instead of waiting for backup or additional resources in order to save as many lives as possible. Instead, law enforcement at the scene of the Uvalde shooting requested “specialty equipment” and body armor and organized a tactical team to reenter the school, taking over an hour to take out the gunman despite having arrived at the scene within minutes after the shooter entered the school.

"According to the meeting agenda, Arredondo could have been suspended or terminated," the Epoch Times reported.

During the meeting, Harrell was asked about the investigations into the failure of stopping the gunman in a timely manner – one by Uvalde County’s district attorney and one by the federal Department of Justice.

"I know that people ask about the investigation. I know that investigation’s ongoing. I know the DOJ is reviewing that investigation," Harrell said. "I want answers just like everybody but I don't have answers. They've not given me answers. So I don’t have anything to provide you in that realm. I don't. I wish I did have answers."

Arredondo did not attend the school board meeting, and has kept a low profile since the mass shooting on May 24.

MSNBC host agrees with suggestion that Uvalde police were motivated by race to delay their response



MSNBC host Joy Reid affirmed this week the horrendous suggestion that race played a role in the apparently botched law enforcement response to the Uvalde mass killing.

What happened?

While speaking with María Teresa Kumar, president and CEO of Voto Latino, about the upcoming election, Reid said that Hispanic voters should take into consideration where they live, citing Uvalde and the police response.

"[It] doesn’t take eleven minutes for the police to respond to an active shooter call. That was the first thing that got my spidey senses going. Because in wealthy communities, it don't take eleven minutes. You got your sirens on. You're motoring down— and it took that long to even respond at all? That got me very concerned," Reid said.

Kumar agreed with Reid, and she claimed a Texas state senator voiced the same concern to her. Kumar did not identity that politician.

"I had a conversation with a state senator there, and basically what you're echoing was what he shared with me," Kumar claimed. "That if that had been a different part of town it wouldn't have taken so long and there wouldn’t have been such a long response rate.

"One likes to feel that is not happening, but sadly when you start looking at the statistics, when you start looking at the response rate, the utter failure of that police department, you do have to start— take a step back and question what did race play into it," she added.

"Yeah," Reid affirmed.


What is the truth?

Police confirmed last week that officers staged outside the classroom where the Uvalde gunman was because the incident commander — Pete Arredondo, police chief of the Uvalde school district — believed the gunman had barricaded himself inside the classroom and that no more lives were at risk.

"With the benefit of hindsight, from where I'm sitting now, of course it was not the right decision. It was the wrong decision, period," said Steve McCraw, director of the Texas DPS. "Clearly, there were kids in the room. Clearly, they were at risk."

There is, in fact, zero evidence to show that police in a majority-Hispanic community were motivated by race to delay their response to an active shooter at a school where many of their own children attend.