The Uvalde school police chief was sworn in to his new city council seat in a private ceremony one week after a school shooting that killed 19 children and two adults, and, without explanation, did not attend his first council meeting.1 A mother who, after being unhandcuffed by police, rescued her two children from Robb Elementary and then told members of the media there was no police presence inside the building, received an anonymous phone call from law enforcement threatening to charge her with a probation violation for obstruction of justice; a judge reassured her that no court would rule against her.
Weekly Review
Weekly Review
Weekly Review
The Uvalde school police chief was sworn in to his new city council seat in a private ceremony one week after a school shooting that killed 19 children and two adults, and, without explanation, did not attend his first council meeting.1 A mother who, after being unhandcuffed by police, rescued her two children from Robb Elementary and then told members of the media there was no police presence inside the building, received an anonymous phone call from law enforcement threatening to charge her with a probation violation for obstruction of justice; a judge reassured her that no court would rule against her.