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Uvalde Timeline of Events: Police Response, Minute by Minute

Getty Uvalde timeline presented by authorities

Numerous 911 calls were made from inside classrooms at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, with a student pleading with a dispatcher to “please send the police now.” At 12:16 p.m., a 911 caller revealed that eight-nine students were still alive. Yet police did not breach the classroom to kill active shooter Salvador Ramos until 12:50 p.m., even though 19 officers were inside the school.

By that time, 19 children and two beloved teachers were dead inside classrooms in what was one of the nation’s deadliest school shootings in history.

You can read the full minute-by-minute timeline of police response later in the story.

The detailed information came from a timeline of events and police response released during a news conference on Friday, May 27, 2022, by Steven McCraw, the head of the Texas Department of Public Safety.

Since the mass shooting occurred on May 24, 2022, law enforcement officials have released conflicting information about law enforcement response to it. Video emerged showing frantic parents being prevented by law enforcement from going into the school.


McCraw revealed that an incident commander at the scene treated the unfolding situation as a barricaded subject not an active shooter and wanted to wait for a tactical unit to arrive with more equipment before breaching the classroom door where Ramos, 18, was holed up.

This was the wrong decision, he said.

“With the benefit hindsight, from where I am sitting here, of course it was not the right decision,” McCraw said as reporters yelled questions at him. “It was the wrong decision, period. There is no excuse for that….We believe there should have been an entry as soon as you can…you don’t have time. You don’t worry about outer perimeters.”

The chief of police made that decision, according to McCraw, who himself was not at the scene. The chief has been identified as Pete Arredondo.

McCraw added that it was “believed it had transitioned from an active shooter to a barricaded subject, and that there were no more children at risk. Obviously, there were children in that classroom that were at risk, and it was in fact an active shooter situation and not a barricaded subject.” The suspect had already hit three police officers, although none was seriously injured.

McCraw said that was wrong. “Clearly there were kids in the room, and clearly they were at risk,” he said, adding that children may have been injured and needed life-saving measures as well.

McCraw confirmed that there was a 40-minute time span with 911 calls coming in before officers breached the door and killed Ramos.

FacebookSome of the Uvalde victims.

“There is a 40-minute gap, and if the 911 operators were aware that children were alive in that classroom, why weren’t officers notified about that, and, if that’s the case, why didn’t they take action, that’s the question…the decision was made on the scene, I wasn’t there…that this was a barricaded subject situation. There was time to retrieve the keys and wait for a tactical team with the equipment to go ahead and breach the door and take on the subject at that point. That was the decision, that was the thought process at that particular point in time.”

There were 19 officers inside the school, he confirmed. “There were plenty of officers to do whatever needed to be done with one exception which is that the incident commander inside believed they needed more equipment and more officers to do a tactical breach at that point.” The tactical team eventually did a “dynamic” entry.

According to McCraw, “a barrage, hundreds of rounds were pumped in in four minutes” by Ramos into two classrooms right at the beginning, so it was believed there were no more people alive inside the classroom. Any gunfire after that was “sporadic.” Both classroom doors were locked on the inside, he said.

Yet 911 callers indicated some children were still alive, McCraw confirmed. Some of the 911 callers survived, he said, but he was not specific.

The two classrooms are connected, which allowed the gunman to move back and forth between them, McCraw said.

On Friday, Texas Governor Greg Abbott said, “Yes, I was misled,” referring to the police response. Abbott said he was “livid about what happened.” He said the information he gave to the public earlier was a “recitation” of what he was told by others. He said he took hand notes in detail about what he was told. “The information that I was given turned out in part to be inaccurate, and I am absolutely livid about that,” Abbott said.

He said the law enforcement leaders who are leading the investigations should “get to the bottom of every fact with absolute certainty.”

Here are the timelines given at the news conference:


911 Call Timeline

GettyA map timeline of the mass shooting suspects movements is seen as Steven C. McCraw, Director and Colonel of the Texas Department of Public Safety, speaks during a press conference about the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School on May 27, 2022 in Uvalde, Texas. McCraw held a press conference to give an update on the investigation into Tuesday’s mass shooting where 19 children and two adults were killed at Robb Elementary School, and admitted that it was the wrong decision to wait and not breach the classroom door as soon as police officers were inside the elementary school. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

11:30 a.m. A 911 call came in that there was a crash and a man with a gun.

12:03 p.m. A 911 caller in room 112 spoke to a dispatcher for 1 minute and 23 seconds. She identified herself, but McCraw did not release her name. The caller whispered that she was in room 112.

12:10 p.m. The woman called back, and advised that multiple people were dead.

12:13 p.m. There was another 911 call.

12:16 p.m. She called back and said 8-9 students were alive.

12:19 p.m. Another person, this one in room 111, called 911. The person hung up when a student told her to hang up.

12:21 p.m. Dispatchers could hear over the 911 call that three shots were fired.

12:36 p.m. A 911 call came in that lasted 21 seconds. The initial caller, a student child, called back. The child was told to stay on the line but be very quiet, and she said, ‘He shot the door.’

12:43 p.m. and 12:47 p.m. The child called 911 and asked dispatchers to ‘please send the police now.’

12:46 p.m. The caller said she could hear the police next door.

12:50 p.m. Shots fired could be heard.

12:51 p.m. There were very loud sounds like officers were moving children out of the room.

Two children called 911 and did not die, according to McCraw.


Police Response Timeline

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11:27 a.m. Authorities know from video that the exterior door, which the shooter later entered to get inside the school, was “propped open by a teacher.” The door was supposed to be locked and wasn’t supposed to be open.

11:28 a.m. The suspect vehicle crashed into a ditch. The teacher ran to room 132 to retrieve a phone. The same teacher walked back to the exit door, which remained open.

Around this time, two males at a nearby funeral home heard the crash and went to the crash scene. When they arrived at the crash scene, they saw a man with a gun exit the passenger side of the car with a backpack. They immediately began running.

Ramos began shooting at them but did not hit them. One of the males fell when he was running. Both males returned to the funeral home. Video showed a teacher reemerged from inside the school, panicked, and called 911.

11:30 a.m. A 911 call came in that there was a crash and a man with a gun.

11:31 a.m. The suspect reached the last row of vehicles in the school parking lot. He began shooting at the school while patrol vehicles got to the nearby funeral home.

It was discussed early on that a resource officer had confronted the suspect. That did not happen, McCraw has now confirmed. He said that information came from preliminary interviews but sometimes witnesses under stress get information wrong. He would not say where the resource officer had gone.

He said the school resource officer was not on scene or on campus. He heard the 911 call and drove immediately to the area and sped to what he thought was the man with a gun at the back of the school, but that turned out to be a teacher, not the suspect. In doing so, he drove right by the suspect, according to McCraw. The suspect at that point was “hunkered down” behind a vehicle and he began shooting at the school.

11:31 a.m. The suspect was shooting in between the vehicle. The patrol vehicle arrived at the funeral home. Multiple shots were fired outside the school. The patrol car accelerated and drove by the shooter and left the camera view.

11:32 a.m. Multiple shots were fired at the school.

11:33 a.m. The suspect entered the school at the door.

11:33 a.m. The suspect began shooting into room 111 or 112. It was not possible to determine from the video angle which classroom he first fired into. He shot at least 100 rounds at that time, based on the audio evidence.

11:35 a.m. Three police officers with the Uvalde Police Department entered the same door as the suspect entered. They were later followed by another four-person team of Uvalde police officers and a deputy sheriff. Thus, there were at that point seven officers on the scene. The three initial police officers arrived and went to the door, but the door was closed. They received grazing wounds from the suspect.

11:37 a.m. There was more gunfire. Another 16 rounds were fired at 11:37, 11:38 and 11:40 and 11:44.

11:51 a.m. A police sergeant and a law enforcement agent started to arrive.

12:03 p.m. Officers continued to arrive in the hallway, There were as many as 19 officers in that hallway.

12:15 p.m. Tactical team members arrived along with shields.

12:21 p.m. The suspect fired again. Law enforcement moved down the hallway.

12:50 a.m. Law enforcement officers breached the door using keys that they were able to get from the janitor. Both doors were locked when officers arrived. They killed the suspect at that time.

Authorities recovered 60 total magazines, 11 inside the school and three on the suspect’s body. Two were in room 112 and six were inside room 111. They also found 32 magazines outside the school, including 31 in a backpack that he did not take into the classrooms with him. He had 1,057 rounds of ammunition. Authorities located 315 rounds in the school, including 142 spent cartridges. They found 35 spent law enforcement cartridges, including eight in the hallway and 27 in classroom 111, where the suspect was killed.


Salvador Ramos Social Media

FacebookSalvador Ramos (l) and a scene from the Uvalde video

McCraw confirmed that Ramos did not post publicly on Facebook that he was going to shoot his grandmother and that he had shot her and third that he was going to shoot up a school. He wrote those things privately via a Facebook messenger application.

In September 2021, Ramos asked his sister to help him buy a gun. She flatly refused.

On Feb. 28, 2022, in a four-group chat on Instagram, it was discussed about Ramos being a school shooter.

On March 1, 2022, a four-group chat on Instagram included Ramos discussing buying a gun.

On March 3, 2022, in another four-person chat, a person said that, “The word on the street is you’re buying a gun,” to which Ramos replied, “Just bought something.”

On March 14, 2022, there was an Instagram posting by Ramos saying “10 more days.” A user responded, “Are you going to shoot up the school or something.” Ramos answered, “No. Stop asking dumb questions, and you will see.”

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Here is a minute-by-minute timeline of the Uvalde police response.