A School District Cop Allegedly Did Nothing To Stop the Uvalde Mass Shooting. Was That Failure a Crime? |
Mass Shootings
Jacob Sullum | 1.6.2026 5:15 PM
After the 2022 shooting that killed 19 students and two teachers at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, police officers were widely condemned for failing to act in time to prevent those deaths. The gunman was not stopped until 77 minutes after the assault began, when members of the U.S. Border Patrol Tactical Unit breached a classroom door and shot him dead.
Outrage at the timid, desultory response to that attack resulted in criminal charges against Pete Arredondo, the school district's police chief, and one of his officers, Adrian Gonzales, whose trial began this week in Corpus Christi. Gonzales, who was suspended along with the rest of the department after the shooting and had officially left his job by the beginning of 2023, faces 29 counts of child endangerment—one for each of the 19 fourth-graders who were killed and one for each of the 10 students who survived. Since each count is a state jail felony punishable by six months to two years of incarceration, Gonzales could receive a lengthy sentence if he is convicted. But while the anger underlying this case is understandable, the legal basis for it is dubious.
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