Uvalde City Council denies school district Police Chief Pete Arredondo's leave of absence request

Earlier Tuesday, Arredondo testified for hours in front of state legislators.

ByTeddy Grant ABCNews logo
Wednesday, June 22, 2022
Official calls police response to Uvalde shooting 'an abject failure'
The Texas State Senate heard testimony Tuesday on the deadly school shooting in Uvalde as part of a committee hearing on preventing future mass shootings in the state.

UVALDE, Texas -- The Uvalde City Council unanimously denied council member Pete Arredondo's request for a leave of absence from future meetings, in an effort to be more transparent following criticisms of law enforcement's handling of the Robb Elementary School mass shooting.



Arredondo, who serves as the chief of police for the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District and was sworn in as a city council member at the end of May, wanted to be exempt from attending future city council meetings.



WATCH: Uvalde footage reveals officers had guns, shields, tools - but no clear orders

Robb Elementary footage shows well-equipped officers entered the Uvalde, Texas school almost immediately, but pulled back once the shooter fired.


A motion was unanimously denied to grant a leave of absence to the newly elected council member, who was not present Tuesday night. Per city council rules, there is a $2 fine for missing council meetings, and after three missed meetings, the other council members can vote to have a member removed from their post.



Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin said he would vote "yes" to replace Arredondo on the city council if he misses three consecutive meetings without a leave of absence. The council pointed out that it can't take an opinion or make any official vote because Arredondo hasn't actually missed three meetings.



MORE: Teacher who survived Uvalde shooting calls police 'cowards,' says he will 'never forgive them'

Fourth-grade teacher Arnulfo Reyes was wounded but survived the shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde. He shared his story with ABC News.


Those attending the meeting Tuesday erupted in cheers when the council denied his leave.



The vote came after a day of testimony during which Arredondo testified for five hours in front of state legislators about the May 24 shooting, which left 19 children and two adults dead.



At a school board meeting on Monday, parents of the victims and members of the Uvalde community called for Arredondo's resignation.



"Having Pete still employed, knowing he is incapable of decision-making that saves lives is terrifying," Brett Cross, the uncle of student Uziyah Garcia, who died in the shooting, said. "Innocence doesn't hide, innocence doesn't change its story, but innocence did die on May 24."



WATCH: How law enforcement narrative of Uvalde mass shooting changed

Authorities in Texas have come under scrutiny for the shifting narrative about crucial elements of the police response, ABC News reports.


Uvalde police have faced public scrutiny for failing to act swiftly after the alleged gunman entered the elementary school with an AR-15 through an unlocked school door.



Surveillance footage showed officers waiting 77 minutes to enter the classroom that the gunman was in before fatally shooting him. Arredondo has claimed he wasn't aware of the 911 calls coming through while officers waited.



SEE ALSO: Uvalde police who delayed entry into school during shooting were waiting for protective gear, official says

Sources tell ABC News that, in a preliminary assessment, state investigators believe that Uvalde officers delayed entry into Robb Elementary School because they were waiting for protective gear to arrive.


Col. Steve McCraw, director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, blasted law enforcement's response to the shooting during a state Senate hearing earlier Tuesday, saying it was an "abject failure."



"I don't care if you have on flip-flops and Bermuda shorts, you go in," he said.



MORE: Official says police had enough officers to stop Uvalde shooter within 3 minutes

Col. Steve McCraw, director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, called the police response to the Uvalde shooting "an abject failure."




The number of people injured or killed does not include the suspect or perpetrator. These graphics show the number of victims across all mass shootings from the last five years.


ABC News' Jenna Harrison Esseling, Matthew Fuhrman and Izzy Alvarez contributed to this report.

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