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Uvalde families sue Texas DPS over Robb Elementary School shooting, settle with city and county

FILE - Investigators search for evidences outside Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, May 25, 2022, Friday will mark the two-year anniversary of the shooting where a gunman killed 19 students and two teachers.
Jae C. Hong
/
AP
FILE - Investigators search for evidences outside Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, May 25, 2022, Friday will mark the two-year anniversary of the shooting where a gunman killed 19 students and two teachers.

Nineteen families who lost their loved ones in the 2022 Robb Elementary School shooting announced a settlement Wednesday with the city and county of Uvalde. They also announced a lawsuit against the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS).

The families are suing the 92 individual DPS officers who were there that day when hundreds of officers from local, state, and federal agencies waited for more than an hourto confront the gunman who killed 19 students and two teachers.

Meanwhile, the families reached a settlement with the city and county of Uvalde for $2 million each in insurance payments. That lawsuit named the then Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District police chief Pete Arredondo — who was supposed to be the incident commander that day — and then-Robb Elementary School principal Mandy Gutierrez.

The settlement included efforts to rebuild the Uvalde Police Department, to establish May 24 as an annual day of remembrance, to design a permanent downtown memorial, and to continue mental health support services for the community.

“Uvalde is a city in need of healing, and this settlement, the terms of which were reached through open, difficult conversations, is an important step forward in that process. The families we represent have every right to be distrustful and angry. I am in awe that, despite that, they agreed to find a way forward so this community can start to heal,” said Erin Rogiers, partner at Guerra LLP, an attorney for the families, along with Koskoff, Koskoff & Bieder PC.

The recent legal developments followed a Department of Justice review that found lives would have been saved if not for unprecedented law enforcement failures.

“Law-enforcement’s inaction that day was a complete and absolute betrayal of these families and the sons, daughters and mothers they lost. TXDPS had the resources, training and firepower to respond appropriately, and they ignored all of it and failed on every level," Rogiers said. "These families have not only the right but also the responsibility to demand justice, both for their own loss and to prevent other families from suffering the same fate.”

DPS did not respond to TPR's requests for comment.

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Kayla Padilla
TPR's News Director Katz leads the organization’s news and journalism efforts, overseeing the newsroom’s day-to-day management and the development of a strategic vision for the news division. He also serves on the organization’s executive leadership team. TPR’s news team currently has 16 staff members, including reporters dedicated to in-depth coverage of subjects including Arts & Culture, Bioscience & Medicine, Education, Technology & Entrepreneurship, Military & Veterans Issues and State Government.