
UVALDE, Texas (AP) — It was 11:28 a.m. when the Ford pickup slammed into a ditch behind the low-slung Texas school and the driver jumped out carrying an AR-15-style rifle.
Twelve minutes after that, authorities say, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos was in the hallways of Robb Elementary School. Soon he entered a fourth-grade classroom. And there, he killed 19 schoolchildren and two teachers in a still-unexplained spasm of violence.
At 12:58 p.m., law enforcement radio chatter said Ramos had been killed and the siege was over.
What happened in those 90 minutes, in a working-class neighborhood near the edge of the little town of Uvalde, has fueled mounting public anger and scrutiny over law enforcement’s response to Tuesday’s rampage.
The six critical questions Uvalde cops need to answer over Texas school shooting
6) What were the 150 police officers at the scene doing other than holding back parents?
Tucker Carlson accuses Texas cops of ‘BS’ lies over why school shooter wasn’t taken down until more than an hour after he’d begun slaughter and says the way police handled bloodbath is a ‘moral crime’
