Uvalde Trial Raises Question of Whether Police Stop School Shootings

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Earlier this month, a few dozen police officers, school district representatives, and one pro-Trump candidate for Congress crowded together in a room above the cafeteria at Samuel V. Champion High School in Boerne. School was cancelled for the day, but there was activity in the hallways, which was being shown on large TV screens at the front of the room. Viewers opened up their phone cameras in anticipation of the demonstration. 

Three drones whirred loudly in a gray metal box in the corner, the fans kicking up enough wind to rustle notebooks. Then, the drones zipped away, down a labyrinth of hallways, toward a mock school shooter.

The technology on display was the product of the Austin-based Campus Guardian Angel, which posits that drones could be the missing piece of this country’s response to school shootings. If a school district buys the tech, drones are placed throughout each campus, ready to fly at speeds of up to 50 miles per hour toward a threat. Once there, the drones can distract the potential shooter, buzzing around like flies, flashing strobe lights and blaring sirens. They can also shoot pepper balls and, if all else fails, ram directly into the person. 

“We talk about Uvalde a lot because in Texas, everybody’s very familiar with it, but that kid crashed his car into a culvert. … It took him [several] minutes to get into the school,” said Bill King, the company’s chief tactical officer. “We would have worn him out. There’s no way he ever would have gotten in.”

About 175 miles away from the drone presentation, the first week of trial was wrapping up for Adrian Gonzales, a former Uvalde CISD officer and the first cop to face potential criminal legal consequences for the botched police response to the deadliest school shooting in Texas history. 

The Robb Elementary memorial in Uvalde in July 2022 (Gus Bova)

On May 24, 2022, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos shot and killed 19 students and two teachers in a pair of adjoined classrooms at Robb Elementary School, where he had been a student years before. A small army of police from various agencies, including 149 Border Patrol agents and 91 state troopers, quickly assembled, but more than 70 minutes passed before officers finally breached the classroom and killed Ramos. 

This now-infamous police inaction hasn’t been the only target of blame for the tragedy. There’s the gun shop that armed a troubled teen with two assault-style rifles, for example, and there were issues with door locks in the school. The shooter had also been giving off warning signs for quite some time before the massacre. But the police response in particular has fueled intense national attention to the tragedy, in addition to inflaming the Uvalde families’ grief—even as the questions of whether any officer was in a position to realistically avert the shooting, and of how many lives would have been saved had officers taken the shooter out more quickly, remain open and painful.

In 2022, Uvalde CISD fired its police chief and then suspended its entire police force. The school district’s superintendent resigned under pressure, and a number of civil lawsuits have been filed. The U.S. Department of Justice investigated the police response to the shooting and issued a scathing report in 2024. But there’s been nothing approaching widespread accountability. The trial of Gonzales was the long-awaited result of a criminal investigation that the local district attorney used as a reason to fight the release of records related to the shooting, to the dismay of many of the families who lost their kids.

Of the nearly 400 law enforcement officers who responded to the shooting scene, only two have been charged criminally for their part in the response: Gonzales and the former Uvalde CISD police chief, Pete Arredondo. Gonzales, one of the first officers on scene the day of the shooting, was indicted by a Uvalde County grand jury in 2024 on 29 counts of child endangerment, after prosecutors argued he failed to distract or delay Ramos despite knowing where he was. Arredondo was indicted on 10 counts of child endangerment. They both pleaded not guilty, and Arredondo’s trial date has yet to be set. 

Although the DOJ investigation found that there were “cascading failures of leadership, decision-making, tactics, policy, and training,” prosecutors have not clarified why none of the other officers have been charged for their actions that day. Early efforts to hold other agencies accountable seem to have been stymied by politics. For example, Texas Ranger Christopher Ryan Kindell was reinstated after being fired for his role in the Uvalde response after the DA, Christina Mitchell, requested it. 

It’s extremely rare for officers to be held criminally responsible for not protecting someone on the job, especially during mass shootings. Though the case against Gonzales has some precedent: In 2023, a former sheriff’s deputy in Broward County, Florida, was tried and acquitted of child neglect and negligence after being charged for not confronting the shooter at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland in 2018. 

Gonzales’ defense team, led by former Bexar County District Attorney Nico LaHood, argued during trial that Gonzales did actively respond to the threat. He and several other officers entered the school shortly after arriving, but retreated when they heard gunfire and one of the officers appeared to be grazed by a bullet. After that, he helped students and teachers in other classrooms where the shooter was not located escape through windows.

LaHood argued that Gonzales never actually saw the teen and therefore didn’t have the chance to stop him. 

More than 400 prospective jurors were called on January 5 for Gonzales’ trial, which was moved out of Uvalde to Nueces County due to fairness concerns. Even with the large pool, it took only one day to seat 12 jurors and four alternates. 

Over nine days of witness testimony, the jury heard emotional recountings from former teachers, some of whom were shot, victims’ family members, and other officers who responded to the scene. Texas Rangers from the Department of Public Safety—who had been tapped by Mitchell to investigate the police response—recreated a timeline of that morning and compared Ramos’ movements to Gonzales’. The timeline showed Gonzales stayed by his patrol car for nearly four minutes, according to trial testimony, during which the shooter entered the school.

Melodye Flores, a former teacher’s aide, said that she saw a man with a gun outside and told Gonzales multiple times, over the course of those minutes, where he was headed. “He just stayed there,” she testified last week. “He was pacing back and forth.” 

Flores and the witnesses brought by the state largely supported the prosecution’s core argument: that Gonzales could have and should have done more to stop Ramos from taking 21 lives. 

In the courtroom, the jury decides what’s true in a legal sense; to the broader public, the question is a moral and ethical one, too.  

“You must assume that unless you stop that shooter, more people are going to die or be seriously injured,” Mo Candy, executive director of the National Association of School Resource Officers (NASRO) told the Texas Observer. “In most instances, it’s going to be one officer on campus. So it’s not like you’re going to have a whole [armed] team there with you to respond. So you are the person that this depends on now, to find the shooter and to stop it.”

Candy said school officers should be “carefully selected, specifically trained, and properly equipped in order to be able to be effective in the job.” 

School district police departments are becoming more common in Texas, often increasing after a mass shooting. Many districts that don’t have their own police force have city police officers stationed at schools. Since 1999, the year of the Columbine shooting in Colorado, the federal government has devoted an estimated $1 billion to putting sworn police officers in schools. 

But the efficacy of these officers remains unproven, especially in the case of mass shootings.

Research is relatively scarce on the subject, but one study found that on campuses with officers present, more people died in shootings than at schools without police. The study didn’t look at cases where the shooter was stopped before firing, but cases of officers or even armed bystanders thwarting potential shooters are rare

Neal McCluskey, director of the CATO Institute’s Center for Educational Freedom, said that school police officers face a reality that’s messier than policies and training often prepare them for. 

“I think the Uvalde situation is kind of illustrative of that,” McCluskey told the Observer. “You can have somebody who is called a school resource officer, you can have lots of police present, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re going to be able to stop a shooter.”

In Uvalde, district officers had completed an active shooter training just two months before Ramos opened fire at Robb Elementary. Yet, in a report released in 2022, investigators from the Texas House of Representatives found that officers on the scene at Robb Elementary “failed to prioritize saving the lives of innocent victims over their own safety.” 

Dr. Lisa Ross, author of the book “School Shootings in American Culture,” said this gap between expectations—promoted by police leaders themselves as well as those counting on their protection—and reality represents a profound problem. 

After the 1999 Columbine mass shooting, which involved a Uvalde-esque period of police inaction, it became the expectation and standard practice for any cop to immediately confront the shooter, rather than waiting for backup or more tactically trained units to arrive. 

“Columbine broke the mold,” Ross said. “The next thing is, ‘Well, what do we do?’ And the answer was, ‘There’s no time to get a team together.’ So the first person on the scene needs to do what we would have done.” In other words, it would no longer be accepted, at least theoretically, to let the death count rise inside a school while waiting for SWAT to arrive.

“The public expects you to sacrifice your life for the innocent children and staff,” Ross said. “That’s the public’s expectation, but that’s different than what actually goes on in law enforcement.” 

In the shooting’s wake, some bereaved Uvalde family members have expressed their own doubts about the abilities of heroic police officers to save kids like theirs, opting to prioritize what many consider the real root issue: the easy availability of highly lethal assault-style rifles. These families engaged in intense advocacy during the 2023 legislative session for a bill to raise the age for buying such weapons of war from 18 to 21, a measure that would have legally barred Ramos from acquiring his guns. The bill made it through a House committee, but no further.

Jesse Rizo, whose 9-year-old niece Jackie Cazares was killed at Robb and who’s been at the forefront of calls for accountability, was elected last year to the Uvalde CISD school board. On Wednesday, he was in the courtroom in Corpus Christi when the jury foreman read the verdict in Gonzales’ trial: not guilty.

“It was like a kick in the gut,” Rizo told the Observer. He watched Gonzales reacting to the acquittal, hugging his wife and daughter. 

“I’m thinking, ‘Man, it’s incredible how you failed … but you get to embrace your wife, you get to embrace your daughter,” Rizo said. “And these parents can’t embrace their kids anymore.”

Javier Cazares, father of Jackie, at the Governor’s Mansion in November 2022 after marching from the Capitol to demand gun control legislation (Gus Bova)

Rizo said, despite the disappointment of a not-guilty verdict, he’s glad he was in the courtroom. Hearing the evidence, he got “answers to a lot of questions that were lingering for a long time.” He’s awaiting the trial of Arredondo and hoping for a different outcome for the ex-police chief, and he said he’d like to see more officers prosecuted, if only so they or their lawyers must get in front of a jury to answer questions. 

“It’s important,” he said. “What grounds me is there’s little children that can’t speak for themselves anymore, and you have to—as painful as it is—you have to see it through.”

The post Uvalde Trial Raises Question of Whether Police Stop School Shootings appeared first on The Texas Observer.

Due to extreme cold Thursday evening, Winter Carnival’s outdoor kickoff is postponed

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Icy King Boreas strikes again: Due to expected extreme cold windchills, the St. Paul Winter Carnival is postponing some of its opening events.

The Kick-off to Carnival, an outdoor laser light show, was scheduled for Thursday, Jan. 22, but will instead be modified to a celebration of the annual festival’s 140th anniversary next Friday, Jan. 30. An ice bar and food truck lineup around Rice Park will also not be open Thursday, Jan. 22, nor Friday, Jan. 23.

The carnival’s indoor Thursday events, including a Klondike Kate cabaret night and a Winter Carnival Night at the Minnesota Wild game, will proceed as normal.

“We’ve consulted with the National Weather Service and local meteorologists, and this decision is being made with everyone’s safety as the top priority,” Carnival executive director Lisa Jacobson said in a statement announcing the schedule change.

As of Thursday morning, carnival organizers still expect Friday and weekend events to take place as scheduled, including the King Boreas Grande Day Parade along Grand Avenue on Saturday, Jan. 24. The ice bar and food truck festival are also set to resume their previously announced hours of operation during the remainder of the carnival.

All of Minnesota, including the Twin Cities, and broad swaths of the upper Midwest are set to experience extreme cold temperatures starting Thursday afternoon. An extreme cold warning — meaning possible windchills in the -40 to -50-degree range — is in effect from 6 p.m. Thursday to noon Friday, and then a slightly less severe cold weather advisory lasts till midnight.

On Saturday, the parade begins at 2 p.m. Daytime temperatures are expected to hit a high of -2 but with sunny conditions and significantly calmer wind, according to the National Weather Service. Still, that forecast would make this year’s parade the coldest in recent memory: Since 2000, only two other Grande Day Parades, in 2009 and 2023, have seen single-digit high temps, according to data from the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.

More information about this year’s Winter Carnival schedule is available in the Pioneer Press’ day-by-day guide.

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Trump administration to expand ban on foreign aid for abortion providers to add groups promoting DEI

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By MATTHEW LEE and ALI SWENSON

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration is expanding its ban on U.S. foreign aid for groups supporting abortion services to include assistance going to international and domestic organizations and agencies that promote gender identity as well as diversity, equity and inclusion programs.

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An administration official said Thursday that the State Department would release final rules that expand the scope of the “Mexico City” policy that has already severely reduced assistance to international organizations that provide abortion-related care. The policy was first established under President Ronald Reagan but rescinded by subsequent Democratic administrations.

The new rules, first reported by Fox News, would halt foreign assistance from going toward not only groups that provide abortion as a method of family planning but also those that advocate “gender ideology” and DEI, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of the rules’ publication in the Federal Register on Friday.

The official said the expanded policy would apply to more than $30 billion in foreign aid that the U.S. provides and would cover not only foreign and U.S.-based aid agencies but international organizations.

“The Trump administration’s expanded global gag rule puts politics between people and their care around the world,” Human Rights Campaign President Kelley Robinson said in a statement. “Simply put, the White House is putting medically necessary health care at risk for people around the world in service to a political agenda.”

It was not immediately clear what the impact of the expansion would be. The Trump administration has already slashed hundreds of millions of dollars in foreign aid and dismantled the U.S. Agency for International Development, which had been the main provider of U.S. assistance.

The move is timed to coincide with the anniversary of the now-overturned Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court ruling and the annual March for Life demonstration by anti-abortion advocates.

“There’s likely to be tens of billions of dollars that will be affected by this policy change, many more billions than in any prior period,” said Jen Kates, senior vice president and director of the Global and Public Health Policy Program at the health care research nonprofit KFF.

The White House reposted a Fox News article on X seemingly confirming the plans, but did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.

People in Gaza dig through garbage for things to burn to keep warm — a far cry from Trump’s vision

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By TOQA EZZIDIN and JULIA FRANKEL

CAIRO (AP) — Desperate Palestinians at a garbage dump in a Gaza neighborhood dug with their bare hands for plastic items to burn to keep warm in the cold and damp winter in the enclave, battered by two years of the Israel-Hamas war.

The scene in the Muwasi area of the city of Khan Younis contrasted starkly with the vision of the territory projected by world leaders gathered in Davos, Switzerland, where they inaugurated U.S. President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace that will oversee Gaza.

At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Trump claimed that “record levels” of humanitarian aid had entered Gaza since the October start of a U.S.-brokered ceasefire deal. His son-in law, Jared Kushner, and envoy Steve Witkoff triumphantly touted the devastated territory’s development potential.

A Palestinian resident of Ras Ein al-Auja village, West Bank burns trash, Sunday, Jan. 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean)

A starkly different reality

In Gaza, months into the truce, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians still languish in displacement camps, sheltering in tents and war-ravaged buildings, unable to protect them from the temperatures dropping below 10 degrees Celsius (50 Fahrenheit) at night.

Despite the ceasefire, there are still recurring deadly strikes in Gaza. Israeli tank shelling on Thursday killed four Palestinians east of Gaza City, according to Mohamed Abu Selmiya, director of the Shifa Hospital, where the bodies were taken. The Israeli military did not immediately comment.

Some in Gaza expressed skepticism about Trump’s Board of Peace and whether it would change their grim lives.

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“This committee includes Israelis. I don’t understand, as citizens, how can we understand this situation?” Rami Ghalban, who was displaced from Khan Younis, said Thursday. “The Israelis that inflicted suffering upon us.”

But grappling with what’s ahead seems futile for others.

“We are in a position where there are no alternatives,” said Fathi Abu Sultan. “Our situation is miserable.”

While aid flow into Gaza has significantly increased since the ceasefire, residents say fuel and firewood are in short supply. Prices are exorbitant and searching for firewood is dangerous. Two 13-year-old boys were shot and killed by Israeli forces on Wednesday as they tried to collect firewood, hospital officials said.

At the Nasser hospital in southern Gaza, dozens of Palestinians gathered Thursday to mourn three Palestinian journalists — including a frequent contributor to Agence France-Presse — killed the day before when an Israeli strike hit their vehicle, according to Gaza health officials.

The Israeli military said the strike came after it spotted suspects who were operating a drone that posed a threat to its troops.

When survival means digging through garbage

For Sanaa Salah, who lives in a tent with her husband and six kids, starting a fire is a critical daily chore so they can cook and keep warm. Her family has barely has enough clothes to keep them warm.

She said the family cannot afford to buy firewood or gas, and that they are aware of the dangers of burning plastic but have no other choice.

“Life is very hard,” she said as her family members threw plastic and paper into a fire to keep it burning. “We cannot even have a cup of tea.”

“This is our life,” she said. “We do not sleep at night from the cold.”

Firewood is just too expensive, said Aziz Akel. His family has no income and they can’t pay the 7 or 8 shekels (about $2.5) it would cost.

“My house is gone and my kids were wounded,” he said.

His daughter, Lina Akel, said he leaves the family’s tent early each morning to look for plastic in the garbage to burn — “the basics of life.”

Mourners bid farewell to 3 Palestinian journalists killed in Israeli strike

The three journalists killed Wednesday were filming near a displacement camp in central Gaza, managed by an Egyptian government committee, said Mohammed Mansour, the committee’s spokesperson.

One of them, Abdul Raouf Shaat, a regular contributor to AFP, was not on assignment for the news agency at the time, it said. A statement from AFP demanded a full investigation.

Israel has barred international journalists from entering to cover the war, aside from rare guided tours. News organizations rely largely on Palestinian journalists and residents in Gaza to show what is happening on the ground.

Mourners on Thursday wept over the journalists’ bodies, which were covered in body bags and had press vests placed on their chests.

More than 470 people have been killed by Israeli fire in Gaza since the ceasefire began in October, according to Gaza’s health ministry. At least 77 have been killed by Israeli gunfire near a ceasefire line that splits the territory between Israeli-held areas and most of Gaza’s Palestinian population, the ministry says.

The ministry, which is part of the Hamas-led government, maintains detailed casualty records that are seen as generally reliable by U.N. agencies and independent experts.

What’s next in Gaza

While Trump tries to build support for his Board of Peace by mapping out a future for Gaza, more details about what’s ahead were emerging Thursday.

Ali Shaath, the head of a new, future technocratic government in Gaza, said the Rafah border crossing will open in both directions next week on the Gaza-Egypt border. Israel said in early December it would open the Gaza side of the crossing but has yet to do so.

Reopening the crossing would make it easier for Palestinians in Gaza to seek medical treatment or visit family in Egypt.

Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to send $1 billion to the Board of Peace for humanitarian purposes in Gaza if the U.S. unblocks the money. He met with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Moscow.

“We believe that only forming and proper functioning of the Palestinian state can lead to a final settlement of the Middle East conflict,” Putin said.

Frankel reported from Jerusalem.