The families of 19 of the victims in the Uvalde elementary school shooting in Texas on Wednesday filed a $500 million federal lawsuit against nearly 100 state police officers who were part of the botched law enforcement response to one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history.

The families said they also agreed to a $2 million settlement with the city, under which city leaders promised higher standards and better training for local police.

The lawsuit and settlement announcement in Uvalde came two days before the two-year anniversary of the massacre. Nineteen fourth-graders and two teachers were killed on May 24, 2022, when a teenage gunman burst into their classroom at Robb Elementary School and began shooting.

The lawsuit, seeking at least $500 million in damages, is the latest of several seeking accountability for the law enforcement response. More than 370 federal, state and local officers converged on the scene, but they waited more than 70 minutes before confronting the shooter.

  • @Riven
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    131 month ago

    And that’s why I feel no simpathy for anyone who voted R there. They literally get what they wanted.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      I do. I feel sympathy for anyone whose child dies, especially if they were murdered. I don’t know which of them voted R and it’s likely some of them didn’t. Hell, the children didn’t vote for anyone. They’re not a single individual and I’m not going to look hard enough at which of them deserve contempt and which don’t.

      I also know how absolutely shit these rural schools are first hand. Anyone who grew up there has had a hard row to hoe in regards to learning history and understanding the world around them.

      However, I won’t look down on anyone who doesn’t feel anything but contempt for communities who get what they vote for. I get it. I’m pissed about it too. I just happen to be pissed at the fucking politicians who have made it impossible to get a halfway decent education at a rural Texas school unless your rural town happens to be incredibly rich.

      • @Riven
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        91 month ago

        I feel sympathy for those parents and the kids but not all the other adults who live in the state vote r and complain about this. I understand the bit about education and propaganda but at a certain point it’s still their fault as adults and my sympathy ran out about 8 years ago.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 month ago

          And I can totally see your point of view and think it’s necessary because compassion doesn’t really work on people like that. I think a lot of the way I feel comes from the fact that the only reason that’s not me is largely due to luck. I made the decision to leave at 18 which gave me a wider view of the world. I went back years later and the town was too small to hold me.

          For years I heard dumb shit like we can’t fix up our park or turn it into a skate park because we were exactly between the east and west coasts so the gangs (code for black people though I didn’t know it at the time) there would come and shoot us all up. The only shooting that wasn’t painted as meth addicts killing each other we had was painted as an undocumented immigrant (I still don’t know if that was true, but my guess would be no) with la raza ties. Someone (I wasn’t clear on who except that they weren’t white, either gangs or cartels) was going to come to our shitty little town and kidnap blonde haired blue eyed girls and sell them into sex slavery. A lot of this shit was on the local news because that’s what local politicians were saying. “Local politicians are concerned that” and then make everything after it seem like it’s a fact if you tuned in 3 seconds too late.

          I’ll say I understand what led a lot of them there and it was fucking insidious. I don’t condone the way they act or the way they vote. And most of them will never understand exactly how they were manipulated into it.