New Uvalde body camera video shows parents begging police to storm school

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The recently published Body Camera Video captures parents begging the assault agents of the Robb primary school in Uvalde, Texas, when an armed man killed 19 students and two teachers on May 24, 2022.
The video was part of the last batch of documents from the local authorities selected during a one -year legal battle on public access, which was finally published this week.
In July, the members of the board of directors of the Uvalde CISD voted unanimously in favor of the publication of the files of the horrible mass turn to Robb Elementary, after 38 months of silence, sorrow and roadblocks.
Parents could be heard on the liberated video begging the police to storm primary school, a few minutes after the horrible mass shot by 18 -year -old shooter Salvador Ramos, marking one of the deadliest class attacks in American history.
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In this image of the video of the police of the police body provided by the Sheriff Department of the County of Uvalde, the law enforcement agents are preparing their weapons during the shooting of the Robb primary school in Uvalde, Texas, May 24, 2022. (Sheriff department of the county of Uvalde via AP)
A parent is understood to ask: “In which class is it?” While another parent shouts: “Go guy, my daughter is in there!”
The Associated Press reported that several other videos show officers inside the building and standing outside, some suggesting that they throw gas by the window or are looking for a locked classroom key.
The parents went to a fence and shouted the police to do something about the shooter.
“Either you enter, or I go, my brother,” we can hear an angry parent tell an officer. “My children are in there, my brother … please!”
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Police from Uvalde and other agents of the police are seen respond to a mass shooting at Robb primary school in Uvalde, Texas, in a video of body camera recorded on May 24, 2022. (Uvalde police department)
The agents continued to tell parents to return and take a step back.
The videos also showed confusion among the officers for a few moments before they storm the classroom in the school corridor that day.
With six hours of bodily camera video, the documents revealed that the deputies went to Ramos’ house three months before the shooting after her mother said she was afraid of him.
The video of the body camera published a year ago shows police officers moving in the corridors of the Robb primary school, as well as the audio of a frantic call at 911 made by the teachers inside the building.
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The Robb primary school panel is seen covered with flowers and gifts on June 17, 2022 in Uvalde, Texas, the site of a mass shooting in May which killed 19 students and two teachers. (Brandon Bell / Getty Images)
One of the terrified professors who frantically composed the 911 described “a lot, a lot of shots”, while another sobbed the phone as a distributor preda to remain silent.
“Hurry up, hurry up, hurry up, hurry up!” The first teacher cried before hanging up.
The delayed response of the police for the shooting – nearly 400 officers waited more than 70 minutes before facing the shooter in a classroom filled with children and injured teachers – was largely condemned as a massive failure.
Just before arriving at school, Ramos pulled and injured her grandmother at home. He then took a van from the house and went to Robb Elementary.
The shooting was the subject of multiple state and local surveys, which unilaterally condemned the police response.
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The police ‘response included nearly 150 American border patrol agents and 91 state police officials, as well as the school police and the city. While dozens of officers stood in the corridor trying to understand what to do, the students inside the class called 911 on mobile phones, begging help and desperate parents who had gathered outside the begged building with officers to enter. A tactical team finally entered the classroom and killed the shooter.
Christina Shaw and Anders Hagstrom of Fox News Digital, as well as the Associated Press, contributed to this report.



