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Uvalde gunman waited for grandfather to leave house before shooting grandmother – who is still unable to speak

Salvador Ramos messaged a 15-year-old girl on social media telling her he was waiting for his grandfather to leave the house ‘before I do it’

Rachel Sharp
Tuesday 21 June 2022 15:43 EDT
Uvalde police response was 'abject failure', hearing told

Uvalde gunman Salvador Ramos waited for his grandfather to leave the house before shooting his grandmother in the face, lawmakers heard on Tuesday – as it was revealed that the 66-year-old is still unable to speak almost one month on from the attack.

Steve McCraw, director of the Texas Department of Public Safety (TDPS), testified before the first Texas Senate public hearing on Tuesday morning about the ongoing investigation into the events surrounding the slaughter of 19 children and two teachers in Robb Elementary School.

On 24 May, Ramos shot his grandmother Celia Gonzalez in the face at the home that they shared, making her the first victim in his deadly rampage which left 21 dead and another 17 injured.

Mr McCraw told state lawmakers that the 18-year-old shooter had messaged a 15-year-old girl on social media telling her that he was waiting for his grandfather to leave the house “before I do it”.

The TDPS director testifed: “And he waited for him to leave and did do it.”

Ms Gonzalez survived the attack but “is still unable to speak” because of her injuries, he said.

The 66-year-old has agreed to be interviewed by investigators – so long as it is in the presence of her daughter – but the interview has yet to take place because of her inability to speak, he said.

The new details came as Mr McCraw revealed the findings to date about the 24 May massacre before the special Texas Senate committee – Senate Special Committee to Protect All Texans – on Tuesday.

In bombshell testimony, he revealed that officers could have ended the active shooting situation and begun rescuing the wounded and dying victims just three minutes after the gunman began opening fire inside.

Three officers armed with rifles and pistols and wearing body armour arrived outside the unlocked classroom at 11.36am – three minutes after Ramos entered the school and the classroom at 11.33am.

According to protocol put in place after the Columbine massacre in 1999, officers should not wait to enter an active shooting situation.

Mr McCraw said that even one officer with a gun is enough to try to tackle an active shooter situation.

“You don’t wait for a SWAT team. If you have one officer that’s enough,” he said.

Salvador Ramos shot dead 19 students and two teachers in the attack
Salvador Ramos shot dead 19 students and two teachers in the attack (Screenshots / CNN)

“You stop the killing and you stop the dying. That is preached and practiced in the state of Texas. It just wasn’t implemented.”

However, another one hour, 14 minutes and eight seconds passed before law enforcement finally entered the classroom and shot the gunman dead.

Mr McCraw also testified that the door to the classroom appears to have been unlocked during the entire massacre but none of the officers tried the door handle.

He testified that the law enforcement response to the Uvalde mass shooting was an “abject failure” where the police chief “put the lives of officers above the lives of children”.

The hearing comes as questions continue to mount over the law enforcement response to the mass shooting, with a delay in officers entering the classroom and killing the gunman now believed to have cost lives.

One teacher died in an ambulance while three children died after reaching hospitals.

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