Texas Public Radio - July 11, 2022
Uvalde residents march for 'unheard voices'
A couple hundred people endured the 105 degree heat Sunday in Uvalde to call for gun control and protest the botched police response to the mass shooting at Robb Elementary in May. 21 people were killed in the shooting, including 19 children.
The event was organized by Javier Cazares, the father of one of the victims, nine-year-old Jackie. He gave the families a platform to call for change.
Families, activists, and community members met at Robb Elementary and marched nearly a mile to the plaza downtown.
They chanted, “Not one more child! Not one more child! Not one more child!”
Once they made it downtown, a representative of every one of the 21 victims lined up at the front. Some said a speech. Others simply said the name of the child or sister they lost.
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The official narrative of what happened on May 24th has changed many times over the past month and a half. Most recently, a report commissioned by the Texas Department of Public Safety found that a Uvalde police officer had the chance to stop the mass shooting at Robb Elementary before it began, something may Don McLaughlin said is false.
There is also still disagreement between DPS and local officials about whether Uvalde CISD Police Chief Pete Arredondo was the incident commander at the time of the shooting and what DPS' role should have been, with more than 91 state troopers in the area as law enforcement waited more than an hour to confront the gunman.
Like many relatives of the victims, Laura Morales is frustrated by the conflicting information state and local officials have provided over the weeks since the shooting. She’s the aunt of 10-year-old Eliahna Torres, one of the 19 children killed.
“I want to know what happened. I want to know what was said," she said. "I want to know,what was the holdup? Where was the action?”
The chairman of the state legislative committee investigating the shooting recently requested a video of the 77 minutes police waited in the hallway be released to the public — but he said the local district attorney denied his request.
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