While Ms. James’s public statements could reflect political or personal animus toward Mr. Trump, the judge said, her comments were not enough to prove that the attorney general had infringed upon Mr. Trump’s rights.

Judge Sannes also found “no evidence that the subpoena enforcement proceeding has been conducted in such a way as to constitute harassment.”

Mr. Trump has denied all wrongdoing and has blasted Ms. James, calling her investigation “a witch hunt.”

Her investigation is focused on his annual financial statements, which contain estimated values of his golf courses, hotels and other properties. Ms. James is scrutinizing whether Mr. Trump and his company falsely — and fraudulently — inflated those values to secure loans and other financial benefits.

In a court filing this year, Ms. James revealed that Mr. Trump’s longtime accounting firm had cut ties with him and essentially retracted nearly a decade’s worth of the financial statements.

She also argued, in a separate filing, that the Trump Organization had engaged in “fraudulent or misleading” practices. But her lawyers said that they needed to collect additional records and testimony, from Mr. Trump in particular, before they could decide whether to file a lawsuit.

Last month, a state judge in Manhattan, Arthur F. Engoron, held Mr. Trump in contempt of court for failing to fully comply with Ms. James’s subpoena seeking his personal records. (The judge recently released the contempt order, after Mr. Trump paid a $110,000 fine and filed additional documents.)

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/27/nyregion/trump-letitia-james-ny.html

Time was — not that long ago — that after a mass shooting, gun rights advocates would nod to the possibility of compromise before waiting for memories to fade and opposing any new legislation to regulate firearms.

This time, they skipped the preliminaries and jumped directly to opposition.

“The most effective tool for keeping kids safe is armed law enforcement on the campus,” Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz said to MSNBC a few hours after a shooter killed at least 21 people in Uvalde, Texas. “Inevitably, when there’s a murder of this kind, you see politicians try to politicize it. You see Democrats and a lot of folks in the media whose immediate solution is to try to restrict the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens. That doesn’t work.”

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The speed of that negative reaction provides the latest example of how, on one issue after another, the gap between blue America and red America has widened so much that even the idea of national agreement appears far-fetched. Many political figures no longer bother pretending to look for it.

Broad agreement on some steps

And yet, significant agreement does exist.

Poll after poll has shown for years that large majorities of the public agree on at least some, limited steps to further regulate firearms.

A survey last year by the Pew Research Center, for example, showed that by 87% to 12%, Americans supported “preventing people with mental illnesses from purchasing guns.” By 81% to 18% they backed “making private gun sales and sales at gun shows subject to background checks.” And by a smaller but still healthy 64% to 36% they favored “banning high-capacity ammunition magazines that hold more than 10 rounds.”

The gunman in Uvalde appears to have carried seven 30-round magazines, authorities in Texas have said.

So why, in the face of such large majorities, does Congress repeatedly do nothing?

One powerful factor is the belief among many Americans that nothing lawmakers do will help the problem.

Asked in that same Pew survey if mass shootings would decline if guns were harder to obtain, about half of Americans said they would go down, but 42% said it would make no difference. Other surveys have found much the same feeling among a large swath of Americans.

The argument about futility is one that opponents of change quickly turn to after a catastrophe. It’s a powerful rhetorical weapon against action.

“It wouldn’t prevent these shootings,” Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said on CNN on Wednesday when asked about banning the sort of semiautomatic weapons used by the killer in Uvalde and by a gunman who killed 10 at a Buffalo, N.Y., supermarket 10 days earlier. “The truth of the matter is these people are going to commit these horrifying crimes — whether they have to use another weapon to do it, they’re going to figure out a way to do it.”

Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott made a similar claim at his news conference on Wednesday: “People who think that, ‘well, maybe we can just implement tougher gun laws, it’s gonna solve it’ — Chicago and L.A. and New York disprove that thesis.”

The facts powerfully suggest that’s not true.

Go back roughly 15 years: In 2005, California had almost the same rate of deaths from guns as Florida or Texas. California had 9.5 firearms deaths per 100,000 people that year, Florida had 10 and Texas 11, according to data from the National Center for Health Statistics.

Since then, California repeatedly has tightened its gun laws, while Florida and Texas have moved in the opposite direction.

California’s rate of gun deaths has declined by 10% since 2005, even as the national rate has climbed in recent years. And Texas and Florida? Their rates of gun deaths have climbed 28% and 37% respectively. California now has one of the 10 lowest rates of gun deaths in the nation. Texas and Florida are headed in the wrong direction.

Obviously, factors beyond a state’s laws can affect the rate of firearms deaths. The national health statistics take into account differences in the age distribution of state populations, but they don’t control for every factor that might affect gun deaths.

Equally clearly, no law stops all shootings.

California’s strict laws didn’t stop the shooting at a Taiwanese church in Laguna Woods earlier this month, and there’s no question that Chicago suffers from a large number of gun-related homicides despite strict gun control laws in Illinois. A large percentage of the guns used in those crimes come across the border from neighboring states with loose gun laws, research has shown.

The overall pattern is clear, nonetheless, and it reinforces the lesson from other countries, including Canada, Britain and Australia, which have tightened gun laws after horrific mass shootings: The states with America’s lowest rates of gun-related deaths all have strict gun laws; in states that allow easy availability of guns, more people die from them.

Fear of futility isn’t the only barrier to passage of national gun legislation.

Hardcore opponents of gun regulation have become more entrenched in their positions over the last decade.

Mostly conservative and Republican and especially prevalent in rural parts of the U.S., staunch opponents of any new legislation restricting firearms generally don’t see gun violence as a major problem but do see the weapons as a major part of their identity. In the Pew survey last year, just 18% of Republicans rated gun violence as one of the top problems facing the country, compared with 73% of Democrats. Other surveys have found much the same.

Strong opponents of gun control turn out in large numbers in Republican primaries, and they make any vote in favor of new restrictions politically toxic for Republican officeholders. In American politics today, where most congressional districts are gerrymandered to be safe for one party and only a few states swing back and forth politically, primaries matter far more to most lawmakers than do general elections.

Even in general elections, gun issues aren’t the top priority for most voters. Background checks and similar measures have wide support, but not necessarily urgent support.

Finally, in an era defined by “negative partisanship” — suspicion and fear of the other side — it’s easy to convince voters that a modest gun control proposal is just an opening wedge designed to lead to something more dramatic.

That leads to a common pattern when gun measures appear on ballots: They do less well than polling would suggest.

The same thing happens to measures in Congress. Nine years ago, for example, supporters of gun control made their last big push for legislation, after the slayings of 26 people, including 20 children, at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

Then, as now, polls showed strong support for requiring background checks for sales that currently evade them. But support for the legislation was sharply lower than support for the general idea, Pew found.

Almost 8 in 10 Republican gun owners favored background checks in general, they found, but when asked about the specific bill, only slightly more than 4 in 10 wanted it to pass. When asked why they backed the general idea but opposed the specific one, most of those polled cited concerns that the bill would set up a “slippery slope” to more regulation or contained provisions that would go further than advertised.

Faced with that sort of skepticism from voters, Republican senators who had flirted with supporting the bill mostly walked away, and it failed.

Then-Vice President Joe Biden led the unsuccessful effort to pass that bill. Nearly a decade later, the political factors impeding action have only grown more powerful.

Texas school shooting

The recent string of devastating shootings has renewed calls for tighter gun restrictions. But as Kevin Rector reported, a loosening of gun laws is almost certainly coming instead, largely because of an expected decision from the Supreme Court, which is likely to strike down a broad law in New York that doesn’t allow individuals to carry guns in public without first demonstrating a “special need” for self-defense.

For all the impassioned speeches and angry tweets, for all the memes and viral videos of gun control proponents quaking with rage, most of the energy and political intensity has been on the side of those who favor greater gun laxity, Mark Barabak wrote.

The shooting has generated a lot of questions from parents about what their own schools are doing for safety. Howard Blume looked at what California officials say about school security.

The latest from Washington

Biden marked the second anniversary of George Floyd’s murder by a Minneapolis police officer by signing an executive order aimed at reforming policing at the federal level. As Eli Stokols reported, Wednesday’s order falls short of what Biden had hoped to achieve through legislation. It directs all federal agencies to revise their use-of-force policies, creates a national registry of officers fired for misconduct and provides grants to incentivize state and local police departments to strengthen restrictions on chokeholds and no-knock warrants.

Sluggish response and questionable decisions by the Food and Drug Administration worsened the nation’s infant formula shortage, agency officials told lawmakers at a congressional hearing. “You’re right to be concerned, and the public should be concerned,” said FDA Commissioner Robert Califf. The agency’s response “was too slow and there were decisions that were suboptimal along the way,” Anumita Kaur reported.

Only a couple of months ago, U.S. and European officials said a renewal of the Iran nuclear deal was “imminent.” But with little progress since then, and a shifting global geopolitical scene, the top U.S. envoy for the Iran negotiations testified Wednesday that prospects for reviving the Iran deal are “at best, tenuous,” Tracy Wilkinson reported. “We do not have a deal,” the Biden administration’s special envoy for Iran, Robert Malley, told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Cuba will not attend next month’s Summit of the Americas, a major conference to take place in Los Angeles, after the U.S. refused to extend a proper invitation, the country’s president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, announced Wednesday. As Wilkinson reported, the decision throws the summit, which is crucial to the U.S.’ ability to demonstrate its influence in the Western Hemisphere, into further disarray.

The latest from California

GOP Rep. Young Kim would seem to have a relatively easy path to reelection in November — the national mood favors her party, she has a lot of money and the newly drawn boundaries for her Orange County district give her more Republican constituents. But Kim is suddenly campaigning with a sense of urgency, Melanie Mason and Seema Mehta report. She’s unleashed $1.3 million in advertising, and outside allies are coming to her aid with more spending. Most of it is aimed at fending off Greg Raths, an underfunded GOP opponent who has been a staple on the political scene in Mission Viejo, the district’s largest city.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and top legislative Democrats pledged Wednesday to expedite gun legislation. Among the bills are measures that would require school officials to investigate credible threats of a mass shooting, allow private citizens to sue firearm manufacturers and distributors, and enact more than a dozen other policies intended to reduce gun violence in California, Taryn Luna and Hannah Wiley reported. “We’re going to control the controllable, the things we have control of,” Newsom said during an event at the state Capitol. “California leads this national conversation. When California moves, other states move in the same direction.”

The Los Angeles mayor’s race has seemingly devolved in recent days into a rhetorical brawl between two of the city’s richest men, Benjamin Oreskes wrote. Hollywood mogul Jeffrey Katzenberg, who supports Rep. Karen Bass, says Rick Caruso’s history of supporting Republican candidates and being registered as a Republican a decade ago disqualifies him from being mayor. That came after Variety published an interview with Caruso in which he attacked the former Walt Disney Studios chairman for “lying” about him in ads by a pro-Bass independent expenditure committee predominantly funded by Katzenberg.

The growing corruption scandal in Anaheim has cost the city’s mayor his job, endangered the city’s planned $320-million sale of Angel Stadium to the team and provided a rare, unvarnished look at how business is done behind closed doors in the city of 350,000. Read our full coverage of the FBI probe into how the city does business.

Sign up for our California Politics newsletter to get the best of The Times’ state politics reporting.

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Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/politics/newsletter/2022-05-27/on-guns-fear-of-futility-deters-action-essential-politics

(CNN)How a teen with an assault-style rifle walked into an unlocked Texas elementary school and stayed nearly an hour — turning a classroom into a killing field as desperate parents begged officers outside to let them in — has emerged as a key horrifying question about the police response to the deadliest US school shooting in almost a decade.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/27/us/uvalde-texas-elementary-school-shooting-friday/index.html

    Fourth-grade teacher Irma Garcia was one of two faculty members killed on Tuesday during a mass shooting at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas. On Thursday morning, her husband and high school sweetheart Joe died from what family members said was a “medical emergency.” 

    “I truly believe Joe died of a broken heart,” Irma Garcia’s cousin Debra Austin wrote on a GoFundMe page. “Losing the love of his life of more than 25 years was too much to bear.” 

    Courtesy GoFundMe


    One of the couple’s nephews tweeted that Joe Garcia died after suffering a heart attack at home. 

    “These two will make anyone feel loved no matter what,” he tweeted. “They have the purest hearts ever i love you [so much] tia and tio please be with me every step of the way.” 

    Joe Garcia was 50 years old and had just gotten home from leaving flowers at his wife’s memorial when he “pretty much just fell over,” his nephew, John Martinez, told The New York Times

    CBS News has reached out to the Garcia’s family members for further information.

    Martinez wrote on Twitter that his uncle had “passed away due to grief.” 

    “I truly am at a loss for words for how we are all feeling,” he said. “…God have mercy on us, this isn’t easy.” 

    Dying from grief, known as broken heart syndrome, is caused by a surge of stress hormones, according to the American Heart Association, that is usually caused by an emotionally stressful event. The death of a loved one is a common reason for the stress-induced cardiomyopathy. 

    According to the association, it is often misdiagnosed as a heart attack because of similar symptoms. Both attacks display a dramatic change in rhythm, but there are no blocked arteries in broken heart syndrome. 

    Martinez said the couple were high school sweethearts and have four children, ages 23, 19, 15 and 13. 

    “No child should have to go through this,” Martinez tweeted. “My heart breaks for them.” 

    A fourth-grader who survived Tuesday’s shooting told CBS affiliate KENS-TV that Irma Garcia and another teacher who was killed, 44-year-old Eva Mireles, saved his and other kids’ lives. 

    “They were in front of my classmates to help,” he said. “To save them.” 

    Following Tuesday’s shooting, Martinez said that his aunt “sacrificed herself protecting the kids in her classroom.” 

    “Irma Garcia is her name,” he said, “and she died a hero.” 

    Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/irma-joe-garcia-death-texas-school-shooting-broken-heart-syndrome/

    HOUSTON (AP) — The National Rifle Association begins its annual convention in Houston on Friday, and leaders of the powerful gun-rights lobbying group are gearing up to “reflect on” — and deflect any blame for — the deadly shooting earlier this week of 19 children and two teachers at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas.

    Former President Donald Trump and other leading Republicans are scheduled to address the three-day firearms marketing and advocacy event, which is expected to draw protesters fed up with gun violence.

    Some scheduled speakers and performers have backed out, including two Texas lawmakers and “American Pie” singer Don McLean, who said “it would be disrespectful” to go ahead with his act in the aftermath of the country’s latest mass shooting.

    While President Joe Biden and Democrats in Congress have renewed calls for stricter gun laws, NRA board member Phil Journey said the focus should be on better mental health care and trying to prevent gun violence. He said he wouldn’t support banning or limiting access to firearms.

    The NRA said in an online statement that people attending the gun show will “reflect on” the Uvalde school shooting, “pray for the victims, recognize our patriotic members, and pledge to redouble our commitment to making our schools secure.”

    People planning to attend picked up registration badges Thursday and shopped for NRA souvenirs, such as T-shirts that say “Suns Out Guns Out.” Police already had set up metal barriers across the street from the convention center, at a park where protesters are expected to gather Friday.

    Gary Francis traveled with his wife and friends from Racine, Wisconsin, to attend the NRA meeting. He said he opposed any gun control regulations in response to the Uvalde shooting.

    “What happened there is obviously tragic,” he said. “But the NRA had nothing to do with it. The people who come here had nothing to do with it.”

    Texas has experienced a series of mass shootings in recent years. During that time, the Republican-led Legislature and governor have relaxed gun laws.

    There is precedent for the NRA to gather amid local mourning and controversy. The organization went ahead with a shortened version of its 1999 meeting in Denver roughly a week after the deadly shooting at Columbine High School in Colorado. Actor Charlton Heston, the NRA president at that time, told attendees that “horrible acts” shouldn’t become opportunities to limit constitutional rights and he denounced critics for casting NRA members as “villains.”

    Rocky Marshall, a former NRA board member, said that although the tragedy in Uvalde “does put the meeting in a bad light,” that’s not a reason to cancel it. Marshall said gun-rights advocates and opponents can perhaps reduce gun violence if they focus on factors such as mental illness or school security.

    “Throwing rocks at the NRA, that doesn’t solve the next mass shooting,” he said. “Throwing rocks at the people that hate guns, that doesn’t solve the next mass shooting.”

    But country music singer Larry Gatlin, who pulled out of planned appearance at the event, said he hopes “the NRA will rethink some of its outdated and ill-thought-out positions.”

    “While I agree with most of the positions held by the NRA, I have come to believe that, while background checks would not stop every madman with a gun, it is at the very least a step in the right direction,” Gatlin said.

    Country singers Lee Greenwood and Larry Stewart also withdrew, Variety reported.

    White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Thursday that the NRA’s leaders “are contributing to the problem of gun violence and not trying to solve it.” She accused them of representing the interests of gun manufacturers, “who are marketing weapons of war to young adults.”

    Two Republican Texas lawmakers who had been scheduled speak Friday — U.S. Sen. John Cornyn and U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw — are no longer attending due to what their staffs said were changes in their schedules.

    Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who was slated to attend, will instead address the convention by prerecorded video, his spokesman told The Dallas Morning News.

    Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, was listed as a speaker, and Trump said Wednesday that he still intends to attend. South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, a Republican, also is sticking to her plans to speak Friday at the NRA event.

    Though personal firearms are allowed at the convention, the NRA said guns would not be permitted during the session featuring Trump because of Secret Service security protocols.

    Several groups have said they planned to stage protests outside of the convention center.

    “This is not the time or the place to have this convention,” said Cesar Espinosa, executive director of FIEL, a Houston-based civil rights group that plans to participate in protests. “We must not just have thoughts and prayers from legislators, but rather we need action to address this public health crisis that is affecting our communities.”

    Democrat Beto O’Rourke, who is challenging Abbott in the 2022 Texas governor’s race, said he would be attending a protest outside the convention Friday.

    Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, a Democrat, said the city is obligated to host the NRA event, which has been under contract for more than two years. But he urged politicians to skip it.

    “You can’t pray and send condolences on one day and then be going and championing guns on the next. That’s wrong,” Turner said.

    Shannon Watts, the founder of gun-control group Moms Demand Action, said she was not surprised the NRA is not canceling its meeting.

    “The real question now is which elected officials will choose to side with violence and go kiss the ring in Houston this weekend instead of siding with communities crying out for public safety,” Watts said.

    ___

    David A. Lieb reported from Jefferson City, Missouri.

    ___

    More on the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas: https://apnews.com/hub/school-shootings.

    Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/uvalde-school-shooting-texas-donald-trump-violence-212dfd1b57474f1ab208d4a72521a010

    Proponents of student debt forgiveness, including Warren and Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), have urged the administration to go much further and cancel at least $50,000 per borrower, if not all outstanding federal education loans. They say reducing the burden of student loans would help stimulate the economy and close the racial wealth gap, as Black borrowers shoulder a disproportionate amount of debt. Before a rally at the White House earlier this month, Wisdom Cole, the national director of the NAACP’s youth and college division, said, “The Black community continues to be shackled by student debt, and $10,000 in cancellation will not break the chains.”

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/us-policy/2022/05/27/biden-student-debt-borrower/

    Senate Republicans are signaling an openness to talks with Democrats on gun violence in the aftermath of back-to-back mass shootings.

    As pressure builds around gun reform on Capitol Hill following the shootings, Republican leaders have encouraged talks exploring a potential bipartisan course of action amid discussion on measures ranging from “red flag” legislation to background checks.

    Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) told CNN on Thursday that he tapped Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), who recently returned to his home state after the recent shooting at an elementary school in Uvalde, to participate in bipartisan talks.

    “What I’ve asked Senator Cornyn to do is to meet with the Democrats who are interested in getting a bipartisan solution and come up with a proposal, if possible, that’s crafted to meet this particular problem,” he said, stressing proposals directly related to the Uvalde shooting.

    Other GOP leaders have also said they’re supportive of bipartisan talks, while similarly pushing back on broad proposals that stray in focus from recent gun violence.

    “I think that we have to at least listen to each other and see if there’s a path forward where we might be able to find solutions that actually address the problem,” said Sen. John Thune (S.D.), the No. 2 Republican in the upper chamber.

    Many Republicans were resistant to Democratic-led calls for gun reform last week, following a racist shooting at a store in a predominantly Black neighborhood in Buffalo, N.Y., that killed 10 people.  

    But Democrats say more Republicans are expressing interest in a possible compromise as the issue of gun violence garners more public attention in the days following the Texas shooting, which left 19 children and two teachers dead.

    Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), who has been helping lead bipartisan talks around gun reform along with Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), estimated on Thursday that about six to twelve Republicans have “indicated serious interest,” particularly on red flag legislation.

    According to Everytown for Gun Safety, a national group focused on preventing gun violence, nineteen states have implemented such laws designed to keep people at risk of harming themselves or others from temporarily accessing firearms.

    There’s also interest in pursuing proposals to expand background checks, like the bipartisan legislation Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) previously brought up years back that sought to mandate background checks for all gun commercial sales.

    “That is the centerpiece as far as I’m concerned of what might be done, and frankly, there’s not much more than that – that can be done,” Toomey told The Hill on Wednesday, adding that a red flag is “possible,” but would be a “tough” lift.

    Last week, Manchin also previously pointed to his and Toomey’s proposal, which also included exemptions for certain exchanges involving friends and family, as the best chance for passage in the 50-50 Senate. But he noted then that the Senate “can’t even get” that legislation, which was first introduced months after the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in 2012.

    However, as talks have gained more steam in recent days, Manchin has appeared more optimistic about a potential compromise, telling reporters that it’s “encouraging” to see bipartisanship in current discussions.

    “This feels different right now,” Manchin said on Thursday.

    Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) said on Thursday that recent comments from McConnell signaled “a glimmer of hope,” while noting Cornyn “was the person who helped find the last fix that we did on the background check system.”

    Cornyn previously worked with Murphy on legislation aimed at strengthening reporting to the National Instant Background Check System (NICS) following another mass shooting at a Sutherland Springs, Texas, church in 2017. According to the Dallas Morning News, former President Trump signed off on the measure the following year as part of a funding bill. 

    Additional proposals that have come up in talks include measures to incentivize states that adopt red flag legislation.

    Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who introduced a bipartisan bill with the same aim following the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Fla. in 2018, told The Hill on Thursday that he recently talked to Sen. Dick Durbin (Ill.), the No. 2 Senate Democrat, and Thune about the measure.

    Thune told reporters he thinks there’s a “general feeling” among Republicans that “it’s better to incentivize [states] than to come up with a national or federal, any kind of a federal requirement. We’ll see where that goes.”

    Murphy said on Thursday that he’s still “trying to game out what’s possible” in talks with Republicans, which he added will continue through the coming recess.

    “I’m glad that, today, there’s a lot of potential Republican partners who want to listen, who want to engage. There’s a sense of urgency, and then we move to specifics,” he said.

    But other Democrats say they aren’t holding their breath just yet on chances of a compromise.

    “I’ll believe that there are Republicans in the Senate who are ready to attack gun violence head on when I see it, and not before,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said on Thursday afternoon.

    Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) also sang a similar tune, noting past inaction on gun reform on a national scale following mass shootings over the years.

    “The truth of the matter is, from Columbine to Parkland to Newtown, now down in Texas, we haven’t seen any change here on the federal level,” he said. “So, we’ll see.”

    Source Article from https://thehill.com/news/senate/3503398-senate-gop-signals-an-openness-to-talking-about-gun-legislation/

    “It’s certainly disheartening now,” says Scruggs. “But I think people need to realize that there was a time when our state leaders said they were open to trying things to stop this, and they invited people to discuss this. Were they serious? Were they just playing a role? Because now that this has happened again, they need to explain themselves.” Here’s what else he had to say:

    The First Effort Felt Legitimate

    In May of 2018, just days after a gunman killed eight students and two teachers at Santa Fe High School in a suburb near Houston, Abbott’s office invited Texas Gun Sense to participate in roundtable talks at the state Capitol. By Scruggs’ account, Abbott seemed receptive to proposed gun regulations, even voicing a few gun control ideas of his own.

    “There were things that he personally floated in that meeting that were, again, modest. But hey — they were better than what we’d ever heard before. That included things like raising the penalty for failing to secure firearms around a minor,” Scruggs explained. “He proposed requiring that stolen firearms be reported to authorities. So those were big things.” During a break, Scruggs also tried to convince Abbott that red flag laws — which provide a mechanism whereby police or family members can seek a court order to seize firearms from a dangerous individual — could be enacted in Texas. Such policies had been adopted in Indiana, a state overwhelmingly governed by Republicans — so why not in Texas, too? Scruggs says Abbott expressed interest in learning more.

    The governor even gave the gun control activist a prominent seat at the table, immediately to his left, with Texas Rifle and Pistol Association Legislative Director Alice Tripp on his right. “She was incredibly pissed off, the whole time, that she had to sit at the same table that I was at,” Scruggs said. (Abbott did not respond to a request for comment.)

    But the Upshot of Those Discussions Was Disappointing

    The governor’s office published the Firearm Safety Action Plan, a report that summarized and endorsed many of the task force’s proposals, placing heavy emphasis on hardening school campuses and providing new resources for law enforcement. Red flag laws received a mention, albeit meekly. (In the table of contents, that section of the report is comically laden with caveats: “Study a Protective Order Law to Keep Guns Out of the Hands of Those Unfit to Bear Arms, But Only After Legal Due Process is Allowed to Ensure Second Amendment Rights are Not Violated……page 34.”)

    Some proposals from that report were enacted — either through executive order or legislation. Notably, Abbott signed legislation to expand the state’s school marshal program, removing a cap on the number of teachers who could be deputized to have weapons in their classrooms.

    But none of the gun control stuff advanced. No new safe storage laws. No mandatory reporting of stolen firearms. No red flag laws. Most of these provisions died in the state senate at the outset of the legislative session, without intervention from the governor.

    “For him not to even speak up in favor of his own proposals was very odd,” Scruggs said.

    Dan Patrick Briefly Positioned Himself as a Maverick Champion of Gun Control

    Then came the devastating 2019 shooting at a Walmart in El Paso, where a lone gunman with an AK-47-style semi-automatic rifle shot 46 people, killing 23 of them. Once again, Abbott tapped Scruggs to serve on a newly formed task force, now branded the Texas Safety Commission, together with state politicians representing the El Paso area, faith leaders, law enforcement officials, gun rights advocates and others.

    This time it was Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick who — in a rare break from his own track record — expressed enthusiasm for gun control measures. “He couldn’t stop talking,” Scruggs said. “He would get up and walk around the room. He proposed several things on gun trafficking and stolen firearms. His big thing that I remember the most was talking about long guns and semiautomatic rifles. Patrick floated the idea that people should be required to get a permit to carry a long gun, just as they [were at that time required to obtain for] a handgun. Patrick was insistent that we had to do something.”

    Outside, activists from Gun Owners of America gathered with rifles on display to demonstrate their opposition to any gun restrictions. According to Scruggs, Lt. Gov. Patrick described them as “terrifying,” while Abbott nodded in agreement. (Neither Abbott nor Patrick responded to requests from POLITICO Magazine to confirm or dispute this account.)

    Encouraged by Patrick’s receptivity, Scruggs offered the commission a list of potential reforms, one of which would have raised the minimum age to purchase a rifle from 18 to 21. “It was talked about,” Scruggs said. “That’s an example of an idea that was before them as an option that, if it wouldn’t have prevented [the shooting at Robb Elementary in Uvalde], it would certainly have made it more difficult.” (The perpetrator in the Uvalde attack legally purchased two semiautomatic rifles immediately upon turning 18.)

    Scruggs’ characterization of Patrick’s attitude behind closed doors jibes with public statements the lieutenant governor made around the same time, in the immediate aftermath of the El Paso shooting and the shooting spree in Midland and Odessa that followed shortly thereafter. Patrick told the Dallas Morning News that he was prepared to “take an arrow to the heart” to defy the wishes of the NRA.

    Update: Dan Patrick responded to Ed’s account: “Ed was a pleasant fellow but has a totally different view than I on the discussions as I remember. He is right that the entire group did have open discussions trying to find common ground and sensible solutions, but not at the expense of abridging our Second Amendment rights. Ed’s ideas were not where we could go as a group but we heard him out. Ed is mistaken on the use of “terrifying.” I never said anyone carrying a long gun was terrifying to me. Totally untrue. I hunt and shoot. Long guns don’t terrify me nor do any other guns. What I recall saying is that some in the public are terrified when they see people walking down the street carrying a rifle out in the open because they don’t know it’s allowed in the law. Regarding licensing on long guns, we would never require a license for hunters to carry their long guns. I’m not sure what he is referring to.”

    But the State Government Made a Dramatic Pivot

    A lot can change in the yearlong intervals that separate legislative sessions in Texas. By the time the state legislature reconvened in 2021, the outrage and urgency of those shootings had faded into the hazy memory of life before the pandemic. A new legislative priority had emerged: “constitutional carry” — the right to carry loaded guns in public, concealed or openly, with no license at all.

    In 2020 and 2021, “constitutional carry” laws were introduced in dozens of state houses across the country, and the maximalist approach to gun rights — once practiced only in Vermont — quickly spread to 25 states, including Texas.

    “In the meetings that I was attending, nobody brought up anything like permitless carry,” Scruggs said. “Again, they were talking about expanding the existing license system to cover semiautomatic rifles. And then they come back and pass the damn thing. What happened?”

    Even before the attack on Robb Elementary school, a tide of gun violence was rising in Texas. Austin saw its bloodiest year ever in 2021, while Houston surpassed Chicago to become one of the most bullet-riddled cities in the country.

    As details emerge from Uvalde, it seems efforts to harden that campus might actually have impeded the law enforcement response — a reinforced classroom door, meant to keep gunmen out, became an obstacle that first-responders couldn’t break down.

    Scruggs is no longer serving in a leadership capacity with Texas Gun Sense, but he remains an activist for gun reform. He advises that, if people in the movement are invited again to participate in any future task force Abbott might convene to revisit the issue, they should decline. “You’ll be used as a prop,” he said.

    The question might be moot. In 2018 and 2019, Abbott was quick to announce plans to formulate a task force or special commission. In this week’s press conferences, he’s made no such announcements.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2022/05/27/gun-control-activist-texas-governor-abbott-scruggs-00035593

    A house explosion killed at least four people Thursday night in Pottstown, Pennsylvania.

    It happened just after 8 p.m. at a home in the area of Washington Street and Butler Avenue.

    Two other people were hurt in the blast and taken to the hospital. Their condition is unknown. And two more people are unaccounted for.

    It’s not yet clear what caused the explosion.

    Police have not yet released the names of the victims.

    The explosion damaged several other homes in Pottstown Borough and forced about 60 people out of their homes.

    Any affected resident in need of assistance should go to Pottstown Senior High School.

    There is an ongoing investigation by Pottstown Borough Police Department. A news conference has been scheduled for noon Friday to release more information.

    Stay with WGAL for updates on this developing story.


    Police statement

    Pottstown police posted the following statement on its website:

    “On Thursday, May 26, 2022, at 8:07pm, the Pottstown Fire Department, EMS, and Police were dispatched to the area of Washington Street and Butler Avenue for a house explosion. Emergency services arrived on scene to find a house that exploded with multiple victims needing medical care.

    “We can confirm that there are four (4) fatalities at this time, and two (2) people were transported to regional hospitals for treatment. We are receiving information that there may still be two (2) people unaccounted for. The Fire Department, EMS, and Police remain on scene along with several other outside agencies including ATF, PSP Fire Marshal’s Office, and Red Cross.

    “Any affected resident who needs assistance should go to the Pottstown Senior High School at 750 N. Washington Street in Pottstown. Red Cross will be on site providing assistance.

    “This is an ongoing investigation. Information is still being obtained and will be disseminated once we have it available.

    “Another press briefing will be held at 12pm on Friday, May 27, 2022.”

    Source Article from https://www.wgal.com/article/people-killed-house-explosion-pottstown-pennsylvania/40125518

    In the three days since 19 children and two teachers were gunned down in a shocking elementary school massacre, details of the horrors endured by students, teachers and devastated family members have poured out of the community of Uvalde, Texas.

    What has been less forthcoming are explanations of how a shooter was able to remain in the school for nearly an hour before he was killed by law enforcement.

    Investigators are still working to piece together a timeline to explain how an 18-year-old gunman was able to walk up to Robb Elementary School with a rifle, enter without being stopped through an unlocked door, barricade himself inside a classroom and open fire on a class filled with children.

    “With all the different agencies that are involved, we’re working every angle that’s available,” Victor Escalon, South Texas regional director for the Department of Public Safety, told reporters Thursday. “We won’t stop until we get all the answers that we possibly can,” he said during a news conference.

    A scene of chaos and confusion began to form outside the school as news of the attack spread on Tuesday.

    Parents desperate to bring their children to safety began to show up at the school, begging law enforcement to let them go inside as they became increasingly frustrated with delays in confronting the shooter, identified as Uvalde resident Salvador Ramos.

    One father said he asked law enforcement to give him their gear.

    “I told one of the officers myself, if they didn’t want to go in there, let me borrow his gun and a vest and I’ll go in there myself to handle it, and they told me no,” the father told CNN. His son survived.

    Several videos captured the frantic scene as parents pleaded with officers to go inside or allow them to go in themselves. The video shows officers holding parents behind the yellow tape of a police line, refusing to let them enter as crying and screaming can be heard in the background.

    After about an hour, a US Border Patrol tactical team forced its way into the classroom and fatally shot the gunman, Escalon said.

    Days after the confrontation, grief-stricken community members are still frustrated about the delay.

    “We deserve to know what happened. These parents deserve to know what happened,” Democratic State Sen. Ronald Gutierrez, whose district includes Uvalde, told CNN, adding “I know there was a failure here.”

    “At the end of the day, we have to find out for the future, so that this never happens again, what kind of failures happened. And I feel in this situation, standing back was not the thing to do,” he said.

    The shooting in Uvalde is the deadliest school shooting in nearly a decade and is at least the 30th shooting at a K-12 school in 2022. The attack came less than two weeks after a racist mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, leaving grieving Americans reeling from yet another act of mass violence and leading to renewed calls for gun law reform.

    As investigators work to complete a timeline of the attack, the final remains of the victims were returned to families Thursday night. Six surviving victims were still hospitalized Thursday, including the shooter’s grandmother, who was shot in the face by her grandson before he drove to the school.

    What we know and don’t know about the shooting timeline

    After shooting his grandmother in her home, Ramos drove to Robb Elementary, where he crashed his truck in a nearby ditch, Texas Department of Public Safety Sgt. Erick Estrada said. It’s unclear why he crashed.

    The shooter fired at two witnesses across the street before walking toward the school and shooting at the building, according to Escalon.

    There were no officers outside the school to stop Ramos when he arrived, Escalon said, contradicting earlier information from authorities that said he was “engaged” by a school resource officer before he entered the school.

    That earlier information was “not accurate,” Escalon said Thursday. The shooter “walked in unobstructed initially,” he said.

    Then, Ramos got into the building through an apparently unlocked door at 11:40 a.m., Escalon said.

    The door he entered through is normally locked, “unless you are leaving to go home on the school bus,” former principal Ross McGlothlin told CNN.

    Inside the school, the shooter barricaded himself inside two adjoining classrooms and fired more than 25 times, Escalon said.

    At 11:44 a.m., law enforcement arrived and entered the school. Three law officers went in the same door the shooter used and four came in through a different entrance, DPS spokesperson Chris Olivarez told CNN. When they went to confront the shooter, he fired at them and they took cover.

    Two responding officers received non-life-threatening gunshot wounds, according to Uvalde Police Chief Daniel Rodriguez.

    “It is important for our community to know that our officers responded within minutes” alongside school resource officers, he said.

    Officers then called for additional tactical teams and resources such as body armor while they worked to evacuate teachers and students, Escalon said. About an hour later, he said, a US border patrol tactical team was able to enter and kill Ramos.

    When asked for more details at a news conference about what exactly responding officers were doing in the hour-long period, Escalon declined to provide further information.

    Grieving community reckons with aftermath

    In the days following Tuesday’s massacre, the residents of Uvalde are still saturated in grief. For some, the devastating news continued to come as community members learned the husband of one of the victims had also died Thursday morning.

    Joe Garcia died of a heart attack, just two days after his wife Irma was killed in the hooting, the Archdiocese of San Antonio told CNN. Irma Garcia was a fourth-grade teacher and had been married to Joe for over 25 years, according to a GoFundMe campaign posted by her cousin. The pair’s family says Joe died of a broken heart.

    Edward Timothy Silva, a second grader who was in the school, told CNN he recalls hiding behind desks in the dark as he heard loud noises in the distance.

    “He was asking me does he have to go to school next year,” his mother Amberlynn Diaz said. “And I just don’t want him to be afraid of school. I want him to continue learning and not be scared of going back to school. I want him to have a normal life again.”

    CNN’s Tina Burnside, Carroll Alvarado, Joe Sutton, Shimon Prokupecz, Travis Caldwell, Jamiel Lynch, Andy Rose, Amanda Musa, Alexa Miranda, Monica Serrano, Amanda Jackson, Caroll Alvarado, Eric Levenson and Holly Yan contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2022/05/27/us/uvalde-texas-elementary-school-shooting-friday/index.html

    UVALDE, Texas, May 26 (Reuters) – The gunman in the Texas school massacre barged unchallenged through an unlocked door, then killed 19 children and two teachers while holed up in their classroom for an hour before a tactical team stormed in and killed him, police said on Thursday.

    The latest official details from the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) on Tuesday’s mass shooting differed sharply from initial police accounts and raised questions about security measures at the elementary school and the response of law enforcement.

    The school district in Uvalde, Texas, about 80 miles (130 km) west of San Antonio, has a standing policy of locking all entrances, including classroom doors, as a safety precaution. But one student told Reuters some doors were left unlocked the day of the shooting to allow visiting parents to come and go for an awards day event.

    The newly detailed chronology came hours after videos emerged showing desperate parents outside Robb Elementary School during the attack. They pleaded with officers to storm the building, and some fathers had to be restrained.

    The human toll of the rampage, which ranks as the deadliest U.S. school shooting in nearly a decade, deepened with news that the husband of one of the slain teachers died of a heart attack on Thursday while preparing for his wife’s funeral. read more

    At a briefing for reporters, DPS spokesperson Victor Escalon said the gunman, Salvador Ramos, 18, made his way unimpeded on to the school grounds after crashing his pickup truck nearby. The carnage began 12 minutes later.

    Preliminary police reports had said that Ramos, who drove to the school from his home after shooting and wounding his grandmother there, was confronted by a school-based police officer as he ran toward the school. Instead, no armed officer was present when Ramos arrived at the school, Escalon said.

    The suspect crashed his pickup truck nearby at 11:28 a.m. (1628 GMT), opened fire on two people at a funeral home across the street, then scaled a fence onto school property and walked into one of the buildings through an unlocked rear door at 11:40 a.m. (1640 GMT), Escalon said.

    Two responding officers entered the school four minutes later but took cover after Ramos fired multiple rounds at them, Escalon said.

    The shooter then barricaded himself inside the fourth-grade classroom of his victims, mostly 9- and 10-year-olds, for an hour before a U.S. Border Patrol tactical team breached the room and fatally shot him, Escalon said. Officers reported hearing at least 25 gunshots coming from inside the classroom early in the siege, he said. read more

    ‘TOUGH QUESTION’

    The hour-long interval before border agents stormed in appeared to be at odds with an approach adopted by many law enforcement agencies to confront “active shooters” at schools immediately to stop bloodshed.

    Asked if police should have made en masse entry sooner, Escalon answered, “That’s a tough question,” adding that authorities would offer more information as the investigation proceeded.

    He described a chaotic scene after the initial exchange of gunfire, with officers calling for backup and evacuating students and staff.

    In one video posted on Facebook by a man named Angel Ledezma, parents can be seen breaking through yellow police tape and yelling at officers to go into the building.

    “It’s already been an hour, and they still can’t get all the kids out,” Ledezma said in the video. He did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Another video posted on YouTube showed officers restraining at least one adult. One woman can be heard saying, “Why let the children die? There’s shooting in there.”

    “We got guys going in to get kids,” one officer is heard telling the crowd. “They’re working.”

    ‘AWARDS DAY’

    Investigators were still seeking a motive, Escalon said. Ramos, a high school dropout, had no criminal record and no history of mental illness. Minutes before the attack, however, he had written an online message saying he was about to “shoot up an elementary school,” according to Governor Greg Abbott.

    The gunman’s father, also named Salvador Ramos, 42, expressed remorse for his son’s actions in an interview published Thursday by news site The Daily Beast.

    “I just want the people to know I’m sorry, man, [for] what my son did,” he was quoted as saying. “He should’ve just killed me, you know, instead of doing something like that to someone.”

    In one of the more chilling accounts of the shooting, a fourth-grade boy who was in the classroom told local TV station KENS5 that the gunman announced his presence when he entered by crouching slightly and saying, “It’s time to die.”

    Why a rear door to the school building would be left unsecured remained under investigation, Escalon said.

    Miguel Cerrillo, 35, and his 8-year-old daughter, Elena, a third-grader at Robb, said the door the shooter used was usually locked.

    “But that day they were not locked because it was awards day, and some parents were coming in through those doors,” said Elena, who was in the school at the time of the shooting. “The parking was really packed in front so people were parking back there and using that door.”

    At least 17 people, including children, were also injured in the massacre.

    The attack, coming 10 days after 10 people were killed by an 18-year-old gunman in a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, has reignited a national debate over firearms. U.S. President Joe Biden and fellow Democrats have vowed to push for new gun restrictions, despite resistance from Republicans. read more

    Biden is due to travel Uvalde on Sunday.

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/us/two-days-after-texas-school-massacre-some-details-remain-murky-2022-05-26/

    KYIV, May 27 (Reuters) – President Volodymyr Zelenskiy urged the West to stop playing around with Russia and impose tougher sanctions on it to end its “senseless war” in Ukraine, adding that his country would remain independent, the only question was at what price.

    Zelenskiy’s criticism of the West has mounted in recent days as the European Union moves slowly towards a possible Russian oil embargo and as thousands of Russian troops try to encircle the two eastern cities of Sievierodonetsk and Lysychansk.

    Three months into its invasion of Ukraine, Russia has abandoned its assault on the capital Kyiv and is trying to consolidate control of the industrial eastern Donbas region, where it has backed a separatist revolt since 2014.

    Western military analysts see the battle for Sievierodonetsk and Lysychansk as a possible turning point in the war after a shift in momentum towards Russia following the surrender of Ukraine’s garrison in Mariupol last week.

    “Ukraine will always be an independent state and it won’t be broken. The only question is what price our people will have to pay for their freedom, and what price Russia will pay for this senseless war against us,” Zelenskiy said in a late-night address on Thursday.

    “The catastrophic unfolding events could be still stopped if the world treated the situation in Ukraine as if it were facing the same situation, if the powers that be did not play around with Russia but really pressed to end the war.”

    Zelenskiy complained about disagreements within the EU on more sanctions against Russia and asked why some countries were being allowed to block the plan.

    The EU is discussing a sixth round of punitive measures, including an embargo on Russian oil imports. It requires unanimity but Hungary opposes the idea on the grounds that its economy would suffer too much. read more

    Hungary needs 3-1/2 to 4 years to shift away from Russian crude and make huge investments to adjust its economy and until there is a deal on all issues, it cannot back the EU’s proposed oil embargo, a top Hungarian aide said.

    Zelenskiy said Russia was getting one billion euros a day from the 27-nation bloc for energy supplies.

    “How many more weeks will the European Union try to agree on a sixth package?” he asked.

    “Pressure on Russia is literally a matter of saving lives. Every day of procrastination, weakness, various disputes or proposals to ‘pacify’ the aggressor at the expense of the victim merely means more Ukrainians being killed.”

    Zelenskiy’s comments mark the second day in a row that he has sharpened his criticism of the world’s approach to the war.

    On Wednesday, he savaged suggestions that Kyiv make concessions to bring peace, saying the idea smacked of attempts to appease Nazi Germany in 1938. read more

    An EU summit on May 30-31 could see divisions between members who want a hard line on Russia and those calling for a ceasefire. read more

    ADVANCING RUSSIANS

    Russian forces attacked from three sides to try to encircle Ukrainian forces in Sievierodonetsk and Lysychansk on Thursday, Ukraine’s military said. If the two cities straddling the Siverskiy Donets river fall, nearly all of the Donbas province of Luhansk would be under Russian control.

    Russia’s Donbas advance has been backed by massive artillery bombardment. Ukraine’s military said 50 towns in the Donetsk and Luhansk provinces were shelled on Thursday.

    Luhansk governor Serhiy Gaidai said five civilians were killed in Sievierodonetsk in 24 hours.

    On Thursday, he said some 150 people were buried in a mass grave in one Lysychansk district as it was too dangerous for families to collect the bodies and bury them individually. Russia says it does not target civilians.

    The head of Ukraine’s armed forces, Valeriy Zaluzhny, called on Telegram for more Western arms, particularly “weapons that will allow us to hit the enemy at a big distance”.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov later warned that any supplies of weapons that could reach Russian territory would be a “a serious step towards unacceptable escalation”.

    DANGER OF ESCALATION

    Western countries led by the United States have provided Ukraine with long-range weaponry, including M777 howitzers and Harpoon anti-ship missiles, from Denmark.

    Washington is even considering providing Kyiv with a rocket system with a range of hundreds of kilometres, and has held discussions with Kyiv about the danger of escalation if it strikes deep inside Russia, U.S. and diplomatic officials told Reuters. read more

    “We have concerns about escalation and yet still do not want to put geographic limits or tie their hands too much with the stuff we’re giving them,” said one U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    Russia calls its actions in Ukraine a “special operation” to disarm Ukraine and protect it from fascists. Ukraine and the West say the fascist allegation is baseless and that the war is an unprovoked act of aggression.

    Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Russia expected Ukraine to accept its demands in any peace talks. It wants Ukraine to recognise Russian sovereignty over the Crimea peninsula Moscow seized in 2014, and the independence of separatist-claimed territory. read more

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/stop-playing-with-russia-end-war-zelenskiy-tells-west-2022-05-27/

    The death toll from the Uvalde school shooting that killed 19 students and two teachers reached the campus’ extended family Thursday, when the husband of one of the slain teachers died of a heart attack.

    Guadalupe “Joe” Garcia – the husband of 46-year-old Irma Garcia, who was shot and killed while sheltering children in her classroom – died two days after the mass killing that shattered his family, a cousin of his wife confirmed on a verified GoFundMe page.

    The Garcias had been together for more than 30 years. They were high school sweethearts before marrying and having four children, the cousin, Debra Austin, wrote.

    Shortly before his fatal heart attack, journalists recorded Joe Garcia dropping flowers off at a cross with his wife’s name written on it, Houston news station KHOU-TV reported.

    “I truly believe Joe died of a broken heart and losing the love of his life … was too much to bear,” Austin wrote.

    The Garcias’ nephew, John Martinez, said via Twitter that the couple’s children – ages 13, 15, 19 and 23 – had now lost both parents.

    My Tia Irma and Joe garcia were high school sweethearts and leave behind 4 beautiful children, their ages being 23, 19, 15 and the youngest only being 13 years old, no child should have to go through this, my heart breaks for them

    — john martinez ❤️‍🔥 (@fuhknjo) May 26, 2022

    Irma Garcia taught fourth-grade students at Robb elementary, in a mostly Hispanic community about 85 miles west of San Antonio, where she had worked for 23 years.

    On her profile on the school’s website, she wrote that she and Joe, 48, enjoyed barbecuing, listening to music, and vacationing at the nearby community of Concan, which sits along Texas’ Frio River.

    The couple’s first child – one of two boys – was completing boot camp with the Marines, and their second, another son, was attending Texas State University, according to the profile. The two youngest children, both daughters, are a high school sophomore and a seventh grader.

    While complete details about Joe Garcia’s death weren’t immediately available Thursday, research has shown that the death of a spouse is one of the most stressful things a person can endure, and grief can take a deadly toll on one’s body in what is termed broken heart syndrome.

    Martinez asked the public to consider donating to the GoFundMe campaign set up to help the Garcias cover various expenses.

    Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/may/26/texas-school-shooting-teacher-husband-heart-attack

    Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, attends a prayer vigil in Uvalde, Texas, Wednesday, May 25, 2022. The vigil was held to honor the victims killed in Tuesday’s shooting at Robb Elementary School.

    Jae C. Hong/AP


    hide caption

    toggle caption

    Jae C. Hong/AP

    Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, attends a prayer vigil in Uvalde, Texas, Wednesday, May 25, 2022. The vigil was held to honor the victims killed in Tuesday’s shooting at Robb Elementary School.

    Jae C. Hong/AP

    U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, a Republican from Texas, walked off on a British journalist after he was pressed about reforming gun laws, and asked why mass shootings happen so frequently in America.

    The exchange happened two days after a gunman killed 19 children and two adults at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, making it the second-deadliest mass shooting at an elementary, middle or high school in U.S. history. Cruz was attending a vigil for the victims.

    “There are 19 sets of parents who are never going to get to kiss their child good night again,” Cruz began saying in a clip of the interview.

    “Is this the moment to reform gun laws?” Sky News reporter Mark Stone asked the senator.

    “You know, it’s easy to go to politics,” Cruz said.

    Stone interjected, saying, “But it’s important. It’s at the heart of the issue.”

    “I get that that’s where the media likes to go,” Cruz said.

    He continued, “The proposals from Democrats and the media, inevitably, when some violent psychopath murders people –”

    Stone then spoke: “A violent psychopath who’s able to get a weapon so easily. An 18-year-old with two AR-15s.”

    Replied Cruz: “If you want to stop violent crime, the proposals the Democrats have, none of them would have stopped this.”

    “But why does this only happen in your country?” Stone said. “I really think that’s what many people around the world, just, they cannot fathom. Why only in America? Why is this American exceptionalism so awful?” to which Cruz shook his head.

    Cruz walked off a few moments later, after touching both of Stone’s shoulders and saying, “You know what? You’ve got your political agenda. God love you.”

    Stone followed Cruz, continuing to press the senator for an answer, and eventually Cruz stopped to respond.

    “Why is it that people come from all over the world to America? This is the freest, most prosperous, safest country on Earth. And stop being a propagandist,” he said before walking out the door.

    Cruz is expected to make an appearance at the National Rifle Association’s annual convention, which takes place Friday to Sunday in Houston.

    Over the span of his career, Cruz’s campaigns have received the most donations of any senators from gun lobbyists, at $442,000, according to OpenSecrets, a nonprofit dedicated to tracking money surrounding America’s elections.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2022/05/27/1101693246/ted-cruz-walks-off-reporter-uvalde-texas-school-shooting

    Four people are dead and at least two others are hurt following a house explosion Thursday night in Pottstown. 

    Emergency responders were called to the 400 block of North Washington Street around 8 p.m. for reports of a house explosion.

    Pottstown Borough Manager Justin Keller told reporters that two other people may be missing.

    Photos posted to social media by reporter Evan Brandt show a massive field of debris. Brandt reports that adjacent homes were also damaged. 

    Katie Washabaugh, who lives down the street from the explosion, told FOX 29 that her entire building shook. 

    “We thought that either an earthquake was happening or that someone crashed into the building,” Washabaugh said.

    People in neighboring areas miles away reported feeling the explosion. 

    There is no word on what caused the property to explode. 

    The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) responded to the scene in addition to local police and fire departments.

    People displaced by the house explosion were told to seek assistance from the Red Cross at Pottstown High School. 

    Pottstown Superintendent Stephen Rodriguez said that all Pottstown schools will be closed on Friday.

    Officials will provide another update on the house explosion Friday at 12 p.m.

    Source Article from https://www.fox29.com/news/explosion-at-property-in-pottstown-prompts-large-emergency-response

    No school police officer confronted the gunman before he went into the school, a state police spokesman said on Thursday, contradicting earlier reports of an encounter outside, and suggesting a shortfall in the response.

    “He walked in unobstructed initially,” Victor Escalon, a regional director for the state’s Department of Public Safety, said at a news conference. “He was not confronted by anybody.”

    Parents had massed outside the school on Tuesday as gunfire erupted inside, urging the police who were holding them at bay to go in and stop the carnage. On Thursday, focus shifted for some lawmakers in Texas and in Washington from debates over the weapon the 18-year-old gunman had used, an AR-15-style rifle, to questions about the hourlong delay in bringing the rampage to an end. Most mass shootings are over within minutes, policing experts said.

    U.S. Border Patrol agents and other law enforcement rushed students at Robb Elementary School to safety.Credit…Pete Luna/Uvalde Leader-News

    “I’m calling on the F.B.I. to use their maximum authority to investigate and provide a full report,” said Representative Joaquin Castro, a Democrat from San Antonio.

    Chief Daniel Rodriguez of the Uvalde Police Department and the head of the school district police, Chief Pete Arredondo, did not respond to requests for comment.

    The first report of a gunman approaching the school came around 11:30 a.m. on Tuesday. Moments before, the gunman, identified as Salvador Ramos, 18, had crashed a pickup truck in a ditch by the school after having shot his 66-year-old grandmother in the face in her home, just a few streets from the school.

    Albert Vargas, 62, an electrician, was at work in a house near Robb Elementary School and said he saw the crash.

    “I ran down there thinking someone got hurt,” he said. Then he saw that the driver was carrying a rifle. “His look matched the black clothes he was wearing,” Mr. Vargas said. He fired briefly at a nearby funeral home, he said. “And then he turns to me and popped two more rounds at close range, but misses, as well,” Mr. Vargas recalled.

    “His face was blank. There was no expression there,” he said. “He looked like nothing mattered but the mission he was on. He fired the shots, ran, jumped a fence and headed towards the school.”

    An armed Uvalde school district officer, who had been nearby, responded to reports that a driver involved in a crash had exited his vehicle with a gun. The officer could not see anyone when he arrived, according to a state police official, but then heard gunshots as the gunman began firing at the windows and entered the building. The officer did not open fire.

    The gunman crashed a truck nearby before climbing a fence surrounding the school.Credit…Ivan Pierre Aguirre for The New York Times

    Investigators were still trying to piece together the gunman’s movements during the time he was outside, before he entered the building. He went through an unlocked door at 11:40 a.m., Mr. Escalon said, and began shooting inside. Police officers, including the school district officer, went into the school minutes later.

    By the time officers reported that the gunman had been killed around 1 p.m., he had shot dead 19 students and two teachers, all of them apparently locked with the gunman in connected classrooms.

    During that terrifying time — well over an hour — parents of students who were trapped in the school gathered outside the building as word spread of the shooting. Some were physically restrained by the police in a scene that witnesses described as disorder bordering on mayhem. The crowd grew to hundreds.

    “Parents were crying and some were fighting verbally with the police and screaming that they wanted their children,” Marcela Cabralez, a pastor, said.

    Miguel Palacios, a small-business owner, said frantic parents were so upset that at one point they tried to take down the school’s chain-link fence. “The parents were on one side of the fence, the Border Patrol and police were on the other side of the fence, and they were trying to tear it open,” he said.

    Some of the parents implored the heavily armed police officers at the chaotic scene to storm the school. Others, including those who were off-duty members of law enforcement, went inside themselves to try to find their own children.

    “There were plenty of men out there armed to the teeth that could have gone in faster,” said Javier Cazares, 43, who arrived at the school on Tuesday as the attack was taking place. He said he could hear gunfire; his daughter, Jacklyn, was inside.

    Jacklyn CazaresCredit…

    “They said they rushed in and all that,” he said. “We didn’t see that.”

    Jacklyn died in the shooting, along with her cousin. Mr. Cazares said he believed that a faster police response would have made a difference. “More kids would have been saved, in my opinion,” he said.

    Chief Rodriguez said in a statement on Thursday that officers from his department went into the school “within minutes” after the shooting began, and that more than one of them had been shot by the gunman. The state police official, who requested anonymity to describe the evolving timeline of events, said two Uvalde officers were shot as they initially tried to enter the classroom at about 11:45 a.m.

    At that point, officials said, the officers fell back and began calling for help. “We have officers calling for additional resources,” Mr. Escalon said. “Tactical teams. We need equipment. We need specialty equipment. We need body armor. We need precision riflemen, negotiators.”

    As the officers fell, the gunman continued shooting, said the state police official. It was during the early minutes, police officials said, that most of the victims inside the room — a pair of what officials said were connected classrooms — were shot.

    But it remained unclear how many of the children or teachers who died could have been saved if the gunman had been killed sooner.

    And questions remained about the decision by the police at the scene to await the arrival of specially trained officers from the Border Patrol to finally storm through the classroom door roughly an hour after officers had first pulled back. Police officials have said that with the gunman isolated in a classroom, the officers on scene focused on evacuating students and staff members from other classrooms in order to prevent additional fatalities.

    Alexandria Rubio’s family members at a makeshift memorial in the center of Uvalde.Credit…Meridith Kohut for The New York Times

    The gunman was reported over the police radio to have been fatally shot by members of the tactical team at about 1 p.m.

    While the Uvalde Police Department has in the past boasted of its SWAT team, those officers did not appear to be involved in trying to stop the gunman.

    The investigation into Tuesday’s shooting and the police response was being led by the Texas Rangers, a division of the Department of Public Safety. The F.B.I. was helping to collect and analyze surveillance video to better understand what took place, according to a law enforcement official.

    Law enforcement training for active shooters has evolved considerably since the Columbine High School massacre in 1999, when the emphasis was on securing a perimeter and waiting for a tactical team before moving in.

    Officers are now trained to disable an active shooter as quickly as possible, before rescuing victims and without waiting for a tactical team or special equipment to arrive. That is true even if only two officers  are available — or one who is willing to go in alone — said Brian Higgins, a former SWAT team commander and police chief who now teaches at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and runs a safety consulting firm.

    Mr. Higgins emphasized that much of what occurred in the Uvalde shooting remained unclear. “If by the police going in, more people would have been injured, they’re in this Catch-22,” Mr. Higgins said. “You don’t want anybody else shot.”

    As parents looked on, police officers could be seen helping evacuate children who were still inside.

    “When they started breaking windows to get kids out, I knew he was still in there alive, in there and shooting,” said Victor Luna, 40, who has a 9-year-old son at the school. “It’s common sense: If they had shot him down, the kids could have come out through the door.”

    He feels police officers should have been willing to sacrifice their own lives to save children. “That’s what they signed up for,” he said.

    Local churches organized a vigil at the Uvalde County Fairplex for the family and friends of victims.Credit…Meridith Kohut for The New York Times

    Law enforcement officers described a chaotic scene and a large number of children who had to be evacuated.

    Jacob Albarado, an off-duty Border Patrol officer, was about to sit down for a haircut when he got a text message from his wife Trisha, a fourth-grade teacher at Robb Elementary.

    “There’s an active shooter,” she said in the message. “Help,” and then: “I love you.”

    Mr. Albarado flew out of the barbershop and sped to the school. His wife and the children she taught were hiding under desks and behind curtains. Their daughter, a second grader at Robb, was locked in a bathroom, she had told him. He borrowed a shotgun from the barber, who had come with him.

    Once he got to the school, he learned that a tactical team was already forming to enter the wing where the gunman was holed up.

    So Mr. Albarado quickly made a plan with other officers at the scene: evacuate as many children as possible. “I’m looking for my daughter, but I also know what wing she’s in,” he said, “so I start clearing all the classes in her wing.”

    Two officers provided cover, guns drawn, he said, and two others guided the children out on the sidewalk. “They were just all hysterical, of course,” he said. When he finally saw his 8-year-old daughter, Jayda, he said, he hugged her, but then kept moving the other children along.

    Still barricaded inside a room elsewhere in the school, the gunman fired sporadically at the walls and door, officials said, until the tactical team went into the room and killed him.

    Shaila Dewan, Edgar Sandoval and Eileen Sullivan contributed reporting. Jack Begg, Susan C. Beachy and Kirsten Noyes contributed research.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/05/26/us/texas-elementary-school-shooting

    The husband of Irma Garcia, one of the teachers killed in Tuesday’s gruesome mass school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, has died.

    Joe Garcia, 50, suffered a “medical emergency” on Thursday, just two days after the massacre at Robb Elementary School, where 19 children and two teachers, including his wife, Irma, were fatally shot.

    Joe delivered flowers to his wife’s memorial on Thursday morning. When he returned home, he collapsed, according to Irma’s nephew, John Martinez, who tweeted about his uncle’s death.

    “When he got home, he was at home for no more than three minutes after sitting down on a chair with the family, Martinez told NBC News. “He just fell over. They tried doing chest compressions and nothing worked. The ambulance came and they couldn’t, they couldn’t bring them back.”

    The Garcias were high school sweethearts and were married for 24 years. They leave behind four children, according to Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District’s website.

    Uvalde School Shooting

    “I don’t even know how to feel. I don’t believe it. I don’t want to believe it,” said Martinez.

    Irma was a 4th-grade teacher and taught at Robb Elementary for 23 years. She died shielding her students from gunfire, according to witnesses.

    Source Article from https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/texas-news/grieving-husband-of-teacher-killed-in-texas-school-shooting-dies/2978839/

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2022/05/26/ukraine-russia-invasion-live-updates/9941153002/

    Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told CNN that he had directed Senator John Cornyn of Texas to the engage in discussions with Democratic Senators to find a bipartisan solution on guns after a mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas left 21 people dead.

    Mr Cornyn headed to Uvalde after the shooting happened and Mr McConnell directed him to begin working with Democratic Senators, including Senators Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, who enjoys many strong relationships with Republicans. and Chris Murphy of Conncecticut, who has become the main voice among Democrats on gun regulations after the Sandy Hook shooting in his home state a decade ago.

    “. As you know he went home yesterday to see the family members and begin the fact finding of this awful massacre and I have encouraged him to talk with Sen Murphy and Sen Sinema and others who are interested in trying to get an outcome that is directly related to the problem. I am hopeful that we could come up with a bipartisan solution,” Mr McConnell told CNN.

    But the Kentucky Republican did not give specific outlines of what proposals he would find acceptable and those he would veto.

    Mr McConnell’s words come after Senate Republicans blocked legislation to combat domestic terrorism that would have allowed for debate to begin on legislation to curb gun violence. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said on Wednesday that the Senate would consider amendments in the larger domestic terrorism legislation.

    The House of Representatives passed the Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act last week in response to the deadly shooting in Buffalo, New York, where a 18-year-old Payton Gendron opened fire and killed 10 people and injured 3, with 11 of the 13 victims being Black.

    But only one Republican in the House, Representative Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, voted for the legislation and 203 Republicans voted against it. Every Democrat in the House supported it.

    Then this week, Salvador Ramos, another 18-year-old, opened fire at Robb Elementary in the city of Uvalde, Texas, killing 19 children and two adults. In response, Mr Schumer said the Senate would consider amendments in the legislation.

    But the failure to pass the domestic terrorism legislation does not mean that there will be no action. Multiple groups of senators are discussing legislation to combat gun legislation.

    Currently, Senator Chris Murphy is negotiating with a number of Republican Senators to come to a bipartisan consensus since the Senate would require 60 votes to avoid a Republican filibuster. Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia has repeatedly said he would not support a change to the filibuster.

    Source Article from https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/domestic-terrorism-bill-senate-republicans-b2088246.html