DEADLY SHOOTING IN TEXAS: 19 Students Killed, 2 Teacher Dead in Elementary School Shooting (Updated)

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UVALDE, Texas — A gunman wearing body armor and carrying a rifle killed at least 19 children and two teachers at an elementary school in this Texas city on Tuesday, authorities said.

It was the deadliest mass shooting to unfold at an American school in nearly a decade.

The massacre began at 11:32 a.m., police said, on the third-to-last day of the school year. The shooter opened fire in a fourth-grade classroom, a parent said, sending children fleeing for their lives. They crawled through windows and hid in a nearby funeral home to escape, witnesses said.

Lt. Christopher Olivarez of the Texas Department of Public Safety said that 19 children and two adults were confirmed dead, not including the gunman, who was killed by law enforcement officials.

Before the gunman drove to the school, he shot his grandmother, Estrada said. She was airlifted to a hospital in San Antonio, as were several other victims.

The shooter barricaded himself inside the school and exchanged gunfire with officers as they entered the building, said Marsha Espinosa, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security. One U.S. Border Patrol agent was wounded.

The gunman was identified by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, R, as Salvador Ramos, 18, a resident of Uvalde. Abbott said a teacher was among those killed.

An emotional President Joe Biden, speaking to the nation Tuesday night from the White House, urged lawmakers to pursue tougher restrictions on guns. For years, Biden has been at the forefront of efforts to pass such restrictions, which have been blocked by Republicans and some Democrats.

“Why are we willing to live with this carnage?” he asked. “Why do we keep letting this happen? Where in God’s name is our backbone?”

Biden noted that mass shootings have become almost commonplace in the United States, unlike in other countries. “It’s time to turn this pain into action,” Biden implored. He concluded his remarks with a prayer for the parents of the victims.

Tuesday’s tragedy carried echoes of the devastating 2012 shooting at an elementary school in Newton, Conn., that left 26 victims dead, most of them first-graders. In 2018, 17 students and staff were killed at a high school in Parkland, Fla.

The rampage in Texas came as the nation was still reeling from a mass shooting earlier this month in Buffalo, where a gunman killed 10 people in a racist attack at a grocery store.

In the first hours after the school shooting in Texas, law enforcement officials were still trying to determine what the gunman’s motive might have been, according to people familiar with the case who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the early stages of the investigation.

The person identified as the gunman just turned 18, and did not have a criminal record, although it is possible that if there were juvenile arrests, those would have been expunged and not immediately located, the people said.

The gunman bought his weapons immediately after his 18th birthday, which was May 16, according to a person briefed on the investigation’s early findings.

Witnesses described a scene of terror at Robb Elementary School, home to students in the second, third and fourth grades. Video shared on social media showed a person clad in black jogging toward a side door of the school carrying what appeared to be a rifle.

Derek Sotelo, 26, who runs a family-owned auto repair shop, said that he and a co-worker were heading to lunch Tuesday when they heard about six gunshots coming from the school. As they rounded the corner, they saw several women who work at a nearby funeral home, screaming, “He’s shooting! He’s shooting!”

The women said the gunman had driven his gray Ford truck into a ditch outside the school, Sotelo said, and when they approached him, thinking he needed assistance, he shot at them. Sotelo said the gunman barricaded himself in the school for a terrible 45 minutes as anxious parents gathered outside, a crowd that grew to more than 300 people.

Inside, Tamica Martinez’s 10-year-old son heard gunfire from the fourth-grade classroom next door. Her son saw two children shot, Martinez said, and escaped the school by crawling out a window.

She rushed to the school when she heard about the shooting but did not find out he was safe until two hours later, when she received a text from her son’s teacher. Her son made it out with only minor scrapes on his arm from the window. “It could have been my son who got shot,” Martinez said.

Sotelo said he saw several teachers and children who had been trapped inside during the ordeal later exit the school, including a little girl in a pink and white T-shirt covered in blood, sobbing and injured.

“We saw a little girl full of blood and the parents were screaming, it was an ugly scene,” Sotelo said. “They were just little kids.”

Marcela Cabralez’s 9-year-old granddaughter was eating her lunch with other third-graders when she heard noise coming from outside, including shots and breaking glass. Teachers herded the children behind a curtain, where they all hid, trying desperately not to make any noise. Cabralez’s grandson hid in a bathroom.

Cabralez, a local pastor, received a call from a colleague who runs the funeral home near the school, asking for her help with the children who had taken shelter there. Inside, Cabralez found traumatized students. Some were rocking themselves, holding each other, covering their ears or screaming. Some stared blankly ahead. One by one, the children told Cabralez what they had seen: bullets flying through the windows, glass breaking all around them, classmates bleeding.

Cabralez said she spontaneously began to pray. “I tried to let them know they were safe,” she said.

Children were taken to a civic center about a mile from the school. For some, it was the where parents were either reunited

City officials in Uvalde, a small, predominantly Latino community of 15,000 people at the juncture of two state highways, struggled to comprehend the horror of what had occurred. “All I know is we have a tragedy right now,” said Uvalde City Council member Everardo Zamora, who represents the district that includes Robb Elementary. His nieces and nephews are students at Robb, which he described as “just a regular school. . . . There’s no words to explain what happened.”

Ramos, the alleged gunman, had attended Uvalde High School, said Santos Valdez Jr., 18, who has known Ramos since childhood. Ramos lived with his mother and sometimes his grandmother, who was a teacher at a different local elementary school, Valdez said.

The two were friends, Valdez said, until Ramos’s behavior began to change in disturbing ways. Once, Ramos pulled up to a park where they often played basketball with cuts all over his face. He said he’d gotten into a fight.

“Then he told me the truth, that he’d cut up his face with knives over and over and over,” Valdez said. “I was like, ‘You’re crazy, bro, why would you do that?'” Ramos’s response: He said he did it for fun, Valdez recalled.

Ramos egged people’s cars, Valdez said, and started wearing black clothes, leather and military-style boots. About a year ago, Ramos posted photos on social media of automatic rifles that “he would have on his wish list,” Valdez said. Four days ago, he posted a photo of two rifles he said he owned.

Valdez said his last interaction with Ramos was about two hours before the shooting, when they messaged each other on Instagram. Valdez had reshared a meme that said “WHY TF IS SCHOOL STILL OPEN” According to a screenshot of their exchange, Ramos responded: “Facts” and “That’s good tho right?”

Tuesday’s massacre was one at least 24 acts of gun violence committed on K-12 campuses during regular hours in 2022, according to a Washington Post database. Those shootings have left at least 28 people dead — making this year already the third-worst since 1999.

The spate of incidents follows a deadly trend that began immediately after schools returned to in-person learning last year after closures prompted by the pandemic. In 2021, there were 42 acts of campus gun violence, a tally that smashed the previous record despite most schools remaining closed for the first two months of the year.

In total, more than 300,000 students have now been exposed to gun violence on their campuses since the 1999 Columbine High School shooting in Colorado.

It’s impossible to know with certainty what has driven the surge over the past 15 months, though researchers have speculated that a spike in gun sales, soaring rates of overall violence, the pandemic and the chaos of the past year all played some role.

The shooting came a day after the FBI released a report saying that the number of active-shooter attacks nationwide had risen sharply last year, doubling the number seen just two years earlier.

In its report, the FBI defined an active shooter attack as one in which a person or people tried to kill others in a populated area. The FBI did not include cases it said were due to factors such as gang violence or “contained residential or domestic disputes.”

There were 61 active shooter attacks last year, including rampages that killed 10 people at a Boulder, Colo., grocery store, eight people at three Atlanta-area spas and four dead at an Oxford, Mich., school.

The number was up from 40 the year before and double the 30 such incidents seen in both 2018 and 2019, the two years before the pandemic. Most of these attacks were not mass killings, which is federally defined as one with at least three victims.

(c) 2022, The Washington Post · Arelis R. Hernández, Joanna Slater, Devlin Barrett, Silvia Foster-Frau 


37 COMMENTS

  1. This is the result of the American education system where it is illegal to talk about God and morals but obligatory to talk about ______________to children in elementary school. And then they wonder why children turn into monsters.

  2. When will this madness end? Nobody is safe anywhere. Our cities are rife with violent crime. People are being shot everywhere.

  3. How many people will have to be killed before we make sure that the common sense gun laws will be passed? A million? A hundred million?

    • Common sense in terms of gun laws is about as dead as those guns’ victims, guns are about as American as Mom, apple pie and mass shootings

    • You’re right. Anyone that is not currently wearing a disposable mask is mamesh a rodef, and the the halacha is, a rodef must be killed.

    • A lot fewer than will be killed before common sense laws about caring more about the victim than the criminal are passed.

  4. what else has to happen before the USA wakes up to the fact that this country has lost its way? kids and adults can obtain guns no matter how many times they have been arrested in the past, parents can add or cut off parts of their children so they can decide for themselves what gender they want to be, laws are being considered to prevent people from throwing their aborted babies into public water like a lake or river, children’s books are being placed in schools so that kids as young as preschoolers can be taught ‘woke’ information. this is very scary and all of those who arent concerned with the way the USA is going are even scarier

  5. I’m a conservative, but when it comes to guns, I want every last one banned except for those needed by law enforcement. I know the line it’s not the guns that kill its the people who kill However there is no logical reason that high powered assault weapons or other such weapons should be manufactured except for the military. Why in the world are these crazies able to get their hands on such weapons?

    • It is not enough to get legal guns off the street. Something has to be done to stop the flow of illegal guns.

      I would be surprised to learn that the NYC subway shooter got his gun legally

    • I’m politically in the center. I used to be very pro gun control. I changed my mind after the George Floyd riots.

      I’m not running to buy a gun but the George Floyd riots caused me to realize that the line of “one day a gun may be your only protection so don’t let them take it away ” is true.

      And while you only hear about mass shootings the skyrocketing shootings in the aftermath of the anti-police laws passed after the George Floyd riots in places that all have VERY strict gun made me question how effective gun control really is.

    • 2nd amendment allows the right to near arms. This was created to prevent the government control us with guns without self defense

        • Yes, Lets get real!! Yes, it is now over 230 years (please see my note above) since the official formal legalization of people’s right to bear arms in the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in those “Frontier Times.” So, yes, let’s get real!! For yes, in the situation now in May, 2022, the western governments are INFINITELY more dangerous to us and INFINITELY more threatening to us than they were 230 years ago during those “Frontier Times”!!

          • You’re right, and the common gun-toting people are equally stupid as over 230 years ago. Guns to defend YOU from the Govt.??? Get real!!!

          • The “gun-toting people” of over 230 years ago in 1791 (when the Bill of Rights with its Second Amendment granting the Right to Bear Arms was ratified) were not stupid at all!! For they were able to look back at the previous 20 years — 250 years ago from us today — at how, because they DID have their hands on guns and other arms, they were able to resist the rough treatment the ruling British were giving them and actually make a full scale war against the British and win the war and, Boruch Hashem, our country, the United States of America was formed as an independent nation.

    • They need guns to protect themselves from those evil racist white supremacists. The school board’s need guns to protect themselves from those evil wicked middle class white parents who disagree with them on CRT. Mayor Eric Adams and his brother needs a gun to protect himself from those white supremacists.
      Blacks – guns
      Whites – no guns

      • News for you, this madness of going on murderous rampages is not down racial lines for you to rant about Left/Right agendas – the shooter was Latino

    • Do you not realize that if the law-abiding individuals such as the average teachers and other staff carry their own guns then murderers can be shot dead and STOPPED mid-carnage faster than the CALL to 911! And then the wait till law enforcement arrives… Makes no sense that only the criminals will be left with the guns!!

      • Excellent observation. Gun control is ABSOLUTELY NOT any kind of solution to this problem!! On the contrary, it is a GRAVE CAUSE of it!! If every one of the teachers and staff members of that school would have been allowed to have had a good strong gun with him or her in his or her classroom, then, when this demented shooting guy would have tried to start up, ANY ONE of those teachers and staff would have been able to IMMEDIATELY knock him down. And, except for the shooting guy, no one would have been hurt!!

        Instead, the current attitude is that guns are “BAD!!” “BAD!!” “BAD!!” “SUPER, SUPER BAD!!” So, no one dares to bring a gun any place; even a person who owns one will keep it hidden away locked up deep inside his or her house. So, when the shooter — who always DOES manage to somehow get his hands on a powerful gun, legally or not — comes and does his thing, NO ONE is able to stop him!! By the time the police finally do arrive, very tragically, many people are already dead!!

        • Taken to its logical extreme, we’ll be living in a gun-toting society, just like in the good ole days. Who gets the parking spot? The faster slinger!
          I can’t believe yidden can be so sold-out and gong-ho about that Yodayim Yedey Eisav schtick. Please de-goyish everyone

  6. And Moster/YAFFED was there to tout the superiority of public school education. NYSED, the uninformed, led by the incompetent, supported by the incapable.

  7. Does anybody really believe you can pass more laws so that criminals who ignore and disobey the laws, would stop doing their crimes?

      • Exactly, it seems that almost only in the good ole US of A will a bullied kid, disgruntled employee or what-have-you resort to the use of the blessed weapons of mass destruction the 2nd Amendment has given in the hands of those idiots.

    • That is right, the wicked criminals who brazenly break laws are certainly not going to be deterred by any more laws stating guns are forbidden. In every one of these terrible shootings, the shooter was OBVIOUSLY able to procure a gun, either through some legal means or through some not legal means.

    • if you read the article, his grandmother was a schoolteacher at another elementary school in the area. Maybe she is the same grandmother airlifted to hospital after being shot.

    • Sorry to break the news to you, but he is 100% a legal American citizen, stop being hard-wired on idiotic political agendas!

  8. It’s not about gun control. It’s about a mental health epidemic that is sweeping the nation. Why are these signs being missed?
    People with bad/crazy intentions will always get guns. We need to make sure we do our part to fix this mental health crisis

    • Yes, we most definitely must (to quote you): “fix this mental health crisis,” which includes that all the people who need mental health care will be able to get good proper mental health care. Now, in general, “good proper mental health care” has two crucial aspects:
      [[[
      1.) Mental Health Care professionals must be people of full integrity, honesty, and decency, with a true love for people — including those who, Rachmana Litzlan, Lo Alaynu, are tragically hit with mental deterioration, and will sincerely want to help them. Tragically, there are some professionals who view compromised people, especially severely compromised ones, as being less than human and that the Torah’s rules of Bein Adam L’Chaveiro do not apply to them and thus perpetuate on them different kinds of abuse.

      2.) Mental Health Treatment must be of the realm of “Natural Healing,” which has numerous techniques that, Im Yirtza Hashem, lead a person to have true good mental — and general — health & functioning. The (so-called) “standard” psychiatric treatments of electroshock therapy and psychotropic medications may bring some “benefits” of TEMPORARILY making a patient “docile” and “quiet.” However, most of them often also bring significant side effects of major harm to a person’s physiology, sometimes leading to incapacitation and death, and many times leading to severe worsening of mental problems themselves, even to extreme violence and unstoppable suicide, Rachmana Litzlan. Nearly every mass shooting involved a shooter who had been using some psychotropic medication.

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