All 21 victims in Texas school shooting were killed inside one classroom

Uvalde, Texas May 25, 2022- Adrian Alonzo is consoled by his mother during a vigil Wednesday at the Uvalde County Fairplex to honor the fallen victims of a mass shooting in Texas. Nineteen students and two teachers died when a gunman opened fire in a classroom yesterday. (Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times)
Adrian Alonzo is consoled by his mother during a vigil Wednesday at the Uvalde County Fairplex to honor the victims of the school shooting. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

A gunman who killed 19 children and two teachers at a Texas elementary school in one of the deadliest school massacres in U.S. history posted his intentions online before barricading himself inside a fourth-grade classroom, where all the fatalities and injuries occurred, state and federal officials said Wednesday.

“We’re still trying to confirm motive, what triggered him,” Lt. Christopher Olivarez, a Texas Department of Public Safety spokesman, told the Los Angeles Times.

Officials say the rampage began with Salvador Ramos, 18, a fast-food worker, shooting his 66-year-old grandmother, Celia M. Gonzales, in the face at her home in Uvalde.

The gunman was spotted minutes later crashing a truck into a ditch and running toward the school with a rifle. An officer with the Uvalde school district engaged the gunman before he entered the school. But at least 40 minutes to an hour passed — the shooter went through a back door, down two short hallways and ended up in a classroom where he opened fire — before a law enforcement officer shot and killed him.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said at a news conference Wednesday afternoon that Ramos was a high school dropout with no criminal record or mental health history. He gave no warning of his crime, Abbott said, until about 30 minutes before he reached the school, when he posted on Facebook that he was going to shoot his grandmother, who had worked as a teacher’s aide for the elementary school until 2020.

In a second post on Facebook, Abbott said, the gunman said he had shot his grandmother. She survived and called 911, officials said.

Less than 15 minutes before arriving at the school, he said, Ramos posted: “I’m going to shoot an elementary school.”

Abbott’s narrative was disputed by Andy Stone, a spokesman for Meta, Facebook’s parent company, who said on Twitter that Ramos’ messages were private one-to-one direct text messages discovered after the shooting occurred. A 15-year-old girl in Frankfurt, Germany, told CNN and the New York Times that she received the messages.

The massacre in the predominantly working-class Latino city of about 16,000 people, roughly 50 miles from the Mexico border, involved the most fatalities of any U.S. school shooting since 2012, when 20 children and six adults were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Conn.

“Uvalde has been shaken to its core,” Abbott said at news conference at the local high school. “Families are broken apart. Hearts are forever shattered. All Texans are grieving with the people of Uvalde.”

As the people of Uvalde mourned, there was little agreement on the root cause of the tragedy — or the solution to the staggering toll of gun violence in America. The shooting, which came less than two weeks after 10 people were killed at a grocery store in Buffalo, N.Y., sparked a renewed burst of calls for more regulation of firearms.

In an exchange that underlined America’s divisions over gun control, Abbott was challenged by Beto O’Rourke, his Democratic rival for governor of Texas, who walked up to the stage and confronted Abbott after he finished speaking.

“The next shooting is right now and you’re doing nothing,” O’Rourke said.

Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin, a Republican, seated behind the governor, rose and shouted to O’Rourke, “Sir, you are out of line!” Then he ordered O’Rourke to leave the auditorium: “I can’t believe you’re a sick son of a bitch who would come to a deal like this to make a political issue.”

“There are family members who are crying as we speak,” Abbott said after O’Rourke was escorted out of the room. “Think about the people who are hurt and help those who are hurt.”

In addition to those killed, 17 people were injured, Olivarez said. All of the dead had been identified and their bodies removed from the school Wednesday, although the campus remained a crime scene and students were dismissed for the year.

On Wednesday, two victims at University Hospital in San Antonio — the shooter’s grandmother and a 10-year-old girl who arrived in critical condition — were reported in serious condition. A 9-year-old girl and another girl, 10, were in good condition.

After Ramos shot his grandmother, he got into a truck, drove at high speed and crashed. Clad in black and wearing a bulletproof vest with no protective ballistic plate inside, he was captured on a security camera with at least one weapon visible as he approached the school.

At 11:43 a.m. Tuesday, Robb Elementary School went into lockdown.

About 34 minutes later, the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District announced on social media that there was an active shooter at the school.

“Law enforcement is on site,” the district said. “Your cooperation is needed at this time by not visiting the campus. As soon as more information is gathered it will be shared. The rest of the district is under a Secure Status.”

The first group of officers who responded to the shooting broke and shattered windows to help the teachers and students evacuate the school, Olivarez said.

Woman crying after a school shooting
A woman cries as she leave the Uvalde civic center in Texas after the shooting at Robb Elementary School on Tuesday. (William Luther / San Antonio Express-News)

The children at Robb Elementary were two days away from summer break when the attacker burst into their classroom. Tuesday’s theme at the school was “Footloose and Fancy,” and students were supposed to wear special outfits with fun or fancy shoes.

Among those killed in the shooting was Eliana “Ellie” Garcia, 9. The second eldest of five girls, Eliana was a helper around the house who loved the movie “Encanto,” cheerleading and basketball, her grandparents said. She dreamed of becoming a teacher.

Her grandfather Rogelio Lugo, 63, spent Tuesday driving among hospitals, then waiting at the civic center as officials swabbed the mouths of his daughter and son-in-law for DNA to identify his granddaughter.

About 9:30 p.m., he said, officials started calling parents’ names, summoning them to a back room to confirm their children were dead.

“When you go in, you know your baby is deceased,” he recalled as he sat in his living room Wednesday, surrounded by family and friends.

He and his wife, Nelda Lugo, 63, had last seen Ellie on Sunday. She spent weekends with her grandparents, reminding them to take their pills, helping to mow the lawn and make tostadas and chalupas. Sitting in their kitchen Wednesday surrounded by loved ones, Lugo said the deaths still didn’t seem real.

“This morning I got up and thought, what a dream I had,” Nelda Lugo said.

Another victim was Amerie Jo Garza, 10. Just that morning, she had posed at school for a photo, beaming as she clutched a bright certificate celebrating her “A-B” honor roll.

“Thank you everyone for the prayers and help trying to find my baby,” her father, Angel Garza, wrote on Facebook shortly after midnight. “She’s been found. My little love is now flying high with the angels above.”

In their briefing for lawmakers early Wednesday, law enforcement officials said Ramos purchased two AR-platform rifles at a local federally licensed firearm seller on May 17 and

May 20. On May 18, he purchased 375 rounds of 5.56-caliber ammunition. One of the rifles was left in the crashed vehicle. The other rifle, a Daniel Defense, was located in the school with the gunman.

Ramos dropped a backpack with several magazines full of ammunition near the school entrance, authorities said. Inside the school, at least seven 30-round magazines were found.

Uniformed state troopers, police and firefighters lingered outside the Uvalde civic center Wednesday morning, but relatives of the dead were nowhere to be seen. Outside the elementary school, state troopers maintained barricades around the active crime scene.

The shooter’s grandfather, Rolando Reyes, 73, said Wednesday that he did not know that his grandson had any guns in the house as he stopped by his home — still a crime scene — before returning to his wife, who he said was undergoing surgery in San Antonio.

Asked about his grandson’s motive in the shooting, he said, “I don’t know.”

Reyes said his grandson lived with him, that they spoke daily, and he didn’t seem upset or have drug problems. Ramos wasn’t licensed to carry a gun, he said.

“I’m so sorry,” Reyes said as he walked past police tape to his car. He knew the victims’ families. “I feel terrible for those who lost children. They were innocent. I feel for all the victims and the families.”

Eduardo Trinidad, whose son is a senior at Uvalde High School, said in a phone interview that Ramos was a loner who wore all black and was bullied because of his strange behavior. “He was always off by himself,” he said. “My son told me he really did not have a lot of contact with the other kids.”

Trinidad said his son told him that Ramos had been working at Wendy’s and was not in school.

“The kid was upset about not graduating,” he said. “That set him off.”

Asked if Texas should introduce more restrictive gun laws in response to the massacre, Abbott dismissed the idea that states like New York, California and Illinois were role models on guns.

“I hate to say it, but there are more people who are shot every weekend in Chicago than there are in schools in Texas,” he said at the news conference. “We need to realize that people who think that, well, maybe we just implement tougher gun laws it’s going to solve it, Chicago and L.A. and New York disprove that thesis.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Illinois and Texas have similar firearm mortality rates (14.1 deaths per 100,000 residents in Illinois in 2020 compared with 14.2 in Texas).

Abbott, who last year signed into law several measures that expanded gun rights in Texas, is scheduled to speak Friday at the National Rifle Assn.’s annual meeting in Houston.

Art Acevedo, the former police chief of Houston and Austin, Texas, said state law allows an 18-year-old to buy AR-style rifles and permits a buyer to purchase two semiautomatic rifles.

“There is a reason why the drinking age is 21,” Acevedo said. “Eighteen to 21 are important years for development. If he had to wait three years to get the guns, maybe he would have changed or got on the law enforcement radar.”

Acevedo said he has heard conservative friends say they think it is reasonable to delay access to this type of rifle: “When people say there is nothing we can do, that isn’t true,” he said. “We can change the age limit here and it would save lives.”

Henry Becerra, a pastor with City Church, which is based in Los Angeles and San Antonio, traveled to Uvalde after the shooting to pray with families overnight and into Wednesday morning.

After meeting them at the civic center, Becerra went to some of their homes to pray with relatives in living rooms as mourners spilled into the yards.

“How many more moments of silence do we have to go through?” Becerra said as he stood with a half-dozen members of his church outside the civic center late Tuesday.

“The last few days, the vulnerable people have been taken advantage of: a grocery store, a church and a school,” he said, alluding to recent shootings in Buffalo, N.Y., and Laguna Woods.

“We need to take action,” Becerra said, but “I don’t have an answer.”

Becerra said he saw families in the civic center being notified that their children had died in the attack.

“They screamed, they cried, they pulled their hair, they yelled, ‘Why?’” he said.

The Rev. Mike Marsh of St. Philip's Episcopal Church in Uvalde, who met at the local hospital Tuesday with relatives of those unaccounted for, said local funeral homes planned to cover funeral costs. He said the city was paying for the burials.

“There’s going to be a lot of emotional trauma for students, teachers and parents that needs to be addressed,” he said. “There’s no good answers.”

On Wednesday evening, Ravenn Vasquez, 21, said she wanted to avoid politics as she stood in a local park holding up a sign to passing cars.

On one side it read “Uvalde Strong.” On the other, “Back the Pack,” a reference to the local school mascot, the Coyotes.

A 2019 Uvalde High graduate, Vasquez said she wanted to spread a positive message — not about politics or gun policy — rather than sit at home in shock watching TV or scrolling social media, she said.

“Just to be here for the community — and get away from the screens for a little bit,” she said as cars streamed by.

Vasquez’s two friends held their own signs.

“Prayers 4 Uvalde,” read one.

“Remember their names,” read the other.

Hennessy-Fiske reported from Uvalde, Jarvie from Atlanta and Winton from Los Angeles. Times staff writer Kevin Rector in Uvalde contributed to this report.

Updates:
9:21 a.m. May 28, 2022:

9:19 a.m. May 28, 2022: Editor’s note: The article was published before new details about the shooting emerged on Friday. Here’s the latest.


For the record:
9:21 a.m. May 28, 2022:

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.