CORPUS CHRISTI โ In the crucial, chaotic minutes before a gunman in Uvalde began firing inside an elementary school, a police officer now accused of failing to protect the children stood by without making a move to prevent the carnage, a prosecutor told a jury Tuesday.
School officerย Adrian Gonzalesย arrived at the scene of one of theย deadliest school shootingsย in U.S. history while the teenage assailant was still outside the building. But he did not try to distract or engage him, even when a teacher pointed out the direction of the shooter, special prosecutor Bill Turner said during opening statements of a criminal trial.
The officer only went inside Robb Elementary โafter the damage had been done,โ Turner said.
Defense attorneys disputed the accusations that Gonzales โ one of two officers charged in the aftermath of the 2022 attack โ did nothing, saying he radioed for more help and evacuated children as other police arrived.
โThe government makes it want to seem like he just sat there,โ said defense attorney Nico LaHood. โHe did what he could, with what he knew at the time.โ
Prosecutors focused sharply on Gonzalesโ steps in the minutes after the shooting began and as the first officers arrived. They did not address the hundreds of other local, state and federal officers who arrived andย waited more than an hourย to confront the gunman, who was eventually killed by a tactical team of officers.
Gonzales, who is no longer a Uvalde schools officer, has pleaded not guilty to 29 counts of child abandonment or endangerment and could be sentenced to a maximum of two years in prison if convicted.
Itโs rare for an officer to be criminally charged with not doing more to save lives.
โHe could have stopped him, but he didnโt want to be the target,โ said Velma Lisa Duran, sister of teacher Irma Garcia, who was among theย 19 students and two teachers who were killed.
Duran, who showed up early at the courthouse to watch the beginning of the trial, said authorities stood by while her sister โdied protecting children.โ
Students grabbed scissors to confront attacker
Defense attorneys described an officer who tried to assess where the gunman was while thinking he was being fired on without protection against a high-powered rifle.
Gonzales was among the first group to go into the building before they took fire from Salvador Ramos, the officerโs attorneys said.
โThis isnโt a man waiting around. This isnโt a man failing to act,โ defense attorney Jason Goss said.
Gonzales and former Uvalde schools police chief Pete Arredondo are the only two officers to face criminal charges over the response. Arredondoโs trial has not been scheduled.
Gonzales, a 10-year veteran of the police force, had extensive active shooter training, the special prosecutor said.
โWhen a child calls 911, we have a right to expect a response,โ Turner said, his voice trembling with emotion.
Stephanie Hale, who was teaching at Robb Elementary the day of the attack, struggled through tears to describe running with students from the playground to the school building and hiding in a classroom.
Hale said once inside, she and other teachers grabbed scissors to defend themselves if the gunman came in the room. Hale described students hiding in the dark as she crawled on her belly to reach the ones who were struggling to stay calm.
โWe got together and came up with a plan: To do what we had to do to defendโ the children, Hale said.
She discovered later some of the children had grabbed safety scissors to mimic the teachers.
But other parts of Haleโs remarks from the witness stand drew an immediate complaint from defense lawyers that stopped testimony for the day.
Hale said she saw a gunman wearing black approaching the school from an area near where Gonzales was. Gonzalesโ attorneys said she had not disclosed that in previous witness interviews, and that it would be a key detail about the officerโs location near the shooter.
The judge agreed to consider arguments over Haleโs testimony until Wednesday. Witness testimony will resume Thursday morning.
Haunting 911 calls bring tears in courtroom
The trial, which is expected to last about two weeks, is sure to be traumatic for the victimsโ families. Some are expected to testify, along with law enforcement agents, emergency dispatchers and school employees.
As testimony began, tissue boxes were brought to the families. Some shook their heads as they listened to audio from the first 911 calls, but as they heard the voices become more frantic, the cries in the courtroom were inescapable.
The trial was moved to Corpus Christi after Gonzalesโ attorneys argued he could not receive a fair trial in Uvalde.
Some families of the victims have voiced anger that more officersย were not chargedย given that nearly 400 federal, state and local officers converged on the school soon after the attack.
Terrified students inside the classrooms called 911 and parents outsideย begged for interventionย by officers, some of whom could hear shots being fired while they stood in a hallway.
An investigation found 77 minutes passed from the time authorities arrived until they breached the classroom and killed Ramos, who wasย obsessed with violence and notorietyย in the months leading up to the shooting.
Reviews found many failures with police response
State and federal reviews of the shooting citedย cascading problemsย in law enforcement training, communication, leadership and technology, and questioned why officers waited so long.
The officerโs attorneys told jurors that there was plenty of blame to go around โ from the lack of security at the school to police policy โ and that prosecutors will try to play on their emotions by showing photos from the scene.
โWhat the prosecution wants you to do is get mad at Adrian. They are going to try to play on your emotions,โ Goss said.
โThe monster who hurt these children is dead,โ he said. โHe did not get this justice.โ
Prosecutors likely will face a high bar to win a conviction. Juries are often reluctant to convict law enforcement officers for inaction, as seen after theย Parkland, Florida, school massacre in 2018. A sheriffโs deputy wasย acquitted by a juryย after being charged with failing to confront the shooter in that attack โ the first such prosecution in the U.S. for an on-campus shooting.
Vertuno reported from Austin. Associated Press journalists Nicholas Ingram in Corpus Christi, Texas; Juan A. Lozano in Houston; and John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, contributed to this report.


