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Federal law protects the firearms industry from many lawsuits, but Uvalde parents are putting the laws to the test by suing a gun manufacturer over the way they market their weapon.
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An open letter signed by Uvalde officials is urging people to give residents of Uvalde time, space and privacy to remember those lost on the one year mark of the Robb Elementary School shooting while a group representing some of the victims’ families wants people to come to town to mourn with them.
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“I’m angry, and I’m not going to give up,” Nikki Cross, the mother of 10-year-old Uvalde shooting victim Uziyah, recently told a group of gun control advocates.
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Veronica and Jerry Mata’s daughter Tess ‘was a loving little girl. She loved hugs. … She could make a friend in a minute.’
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Nikki and Brett Cross recall son Uziyah ‘always wanted to put a smile on your face … and it’s hard because he’s not here to take away these frowns.’
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The monument would be placed at the state Capitol complex pending approval by the Texas Legislature.
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The legislation is a GOP priority following the 2022 school shooting in Uvalde. But some Texas Democrats oppose the measure, arguing more guns in schools isn’t a logical solution.
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One day after 17 migrants were found suffocating in a train car in Texas, law enforcement authorities found 12 more migrants on Saturday in another rail car along the border with Mexico. One of the migrants was dead.
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The group called for changes to the state’s gun laws, like increasing the minimum age to purchase a semi-automatic weapon, along with the implementation of so-called “red flag” laws.
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Most of the state’s 19 mass shootings over the past six decades were carried out by men who legally possessed firearms, an investigation by ProPublica and The Texas Tribune found.
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Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District board members met with the community Monday night to discuss the dropped JPPI internal investigation and changes to the current calendar school year.