Uvalde video fuels outrage over police response
Anger is growing after leaked video showed the delayed police response to the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas. Lilia Luciano spoke to an expert who blames the responding officers for failing to act.
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Anger is growing after leaked video showed the delayed police response to the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas. Lilia Luciano spoke to an expert who blames the responding officers for failing to act.
There is a growing outrage from parents and community members after newly released video from the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, shows the gunman entering Robb Elementary School and how police responded to the massacre. Lilia Luciano reports.
Newly released surveillance video shows scenes from the deadly mass shooting inside Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas. CBS News correspondent Janet Shamlian joins John Dickerson to discuss the latest.
Frustrations are growing over the investigation into the Uvalde school shooting as the fight intensifies over the release of surveillance video from inside the school. Lilia Luciano reports.
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A new report released on Wednesday found that a police officer armed with a rifle missed an opportunity to fire at the gunman while he was waiting for supervisor's permission. The report was done by a training center at Texas State University for active shooter situations found. Janet Shamlian has more.
An Uvalde officer had the gunman in his sight before the shooter entered a school and killed 21 people, according to a new report. The officer asked a supervisor for permission to shoot, but never received it. Janet Shamlian reports.
The report also found that some of the 21 victims, which included 19 children, likely "could have been saved" had they received medical attention sooner.
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The director of the Texas Department of Public Safety said police could have stopped the Uvalde gunman just three minutes after he started shooting. Instead, officers waited more than an hour while the shooter killed 19 children and two teachers. Phil Jankowski, political correspondent for the Dallas Morning News, spoke with CBS News' John Dickerson about how what has changed in the month since the shooting.
People in Uvalde, Texas, are voicing outrage after the head of the state police testified that officers could have stopped the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in just minutes. CBS News' Omar Villafranca shared how community members are responding to the new information on "CBS News Mornings".
Among them: a newspaper saying several officers with heavy firepower were at the school within 19 minutes but waited in a hallway almost an hour. Separately, victims' families called for the firing of the schools' police chief.
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Uvalde school police chief Pete Arredondo is speaking out more than two weeks after 19 students and 2 teachers were killed in a mass shooting. He said he was not aware of 911 calls from inside the classroom and didn't believe he was in charge of the scene. Omar Villafranca has the latest.
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Actor Matthew McConaughey, who is from Uvalde, Texas, gave an impassioned speech at the White House about the 21 victims of the Robb Elementary School shooting and the need for gun reform. Nancy Cordes reports.
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