serious questions about the response of officials. For a staggering 77 minutes, authorities stood by, checking their phones, and casually taking hand sanitizer pumps, as 19 precious lives were lost.
The gravity of the tragedy is compounded by a critical error in classifying the incident. Instead of recognizing it as an active shooter situation, officials mistakenly labeled it as a stand-off. This misclassification hindered the urgency required for immediate and aggressive action, potentially impacting the outcome of the devastating incident.
The incident, which claimed the lives of 19 children and 2 adults, has prompted scrutiny into the actions of officials who were in charge that day. Their seemingly lackadaisical response has drawn widespread criticism, with the community demanding accountability for the lives lost due to delayed intervention.
Most notably, several officials in positions of authority on that day have faced consequences for their actions, or lack thereof. Reports indicate that some have been fired, while others have chosen to resign in the wake of the tragic outcome.
On The Report:
Overview of CIR Team Analysis
Based on these facts, the CIR team identified several critical failures and other breakdowns prior to, during, and after the Robb Elementary School response and analyzed the cascading failures of leadership, decision-making, tactics, policy, and training that contributed to those failures and breakdowns. From the facts and analysis, the CIR team has been able to identify generally accepted practices for an effective law enforcement response to similar mass shootings and offer recommendations in hopes that in the future, law enforcement would be able to act quickly, save lives, and prevent injuries to the greatest extent possible. The most significant failure was that responding officers should have immediately recognized the incident as an active shooter situation, using the resources and equipment that were sufficient to push forward immediately and continuously toward the threat until entry was made into classrooms 111/112 and the threat was eliminated. Since the tragic shooting at Columbine High School in 1999, a fundamental precept in active shooter response and the generally accepted practice is that the first priority must be to immediately neutralize the subject; everything else, including officer safety, is subordinate to that objective. Accordingly, when a subject has already shot numerous victims and is in a room with additional victims, efforts first must be dedicated to making entry into the room, stopping the subject, and rendering aid to victims. These efforts must be undertaken regardless of the equipment and personnel available to those first on the scene.Critical Incident Review: Active Shooter at Robb Elementary School | Executive Summary xvii This did not occur during the Robb Elementary shooting response, where there was a 77-minute gap between when officers first arrived on the scene and when they finally confronted and killed the subject. Several of the first officers on scene initially acted consistent with generally accepted practices to try to engage the subject, and they moved quickly toward classrooms 111/112 within minutes of arriving. But once they retreated after being met with gunfire, the law enforcement responders, including UCISD PD Chief Pete Arredondo—who we conclude was the de facto on-scene incident commander—began treating the incident as a barricaded subject scenario and not as an active shooter situation.