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tv   ABC World News Tonight With David Muir  ABC  May 25, 2022 5:30pm-6:00pm PDT

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tonight, a special edition of "world news tonight." chilling new details now emerging in the horrific elementary school shooting in uvalde, texas. this small community now consumed in grief tonight. 19 children and two teachers killed at robb elementary school. many of the victims just 10 and 11 years old. tonight, what we have now learned about the 18-year-old suspect, a high school dropout here. the governor revealing the alleged gunman sent three private messages on facebook just before all of this began to unfold. first, about shooting his grandmother, and ending with, "i'm going to shoot an elementary school." tonight, authorities retracing his steps, from his grandparents' home to the school. how he got inside and where he went once he got in. barricading himself in a
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classroom and opening fire. the suspect armed with an ar-15-style rifle, ultimately killed by police. and tonight, investigators say the suspect turned 18 just nine dys ago. and that he bought his ar-15-style rifle the next day. then another one just a few days later. and nine days after his birthday, he was here at this school. we are now learning more about the children tonight and their two teachers. some of the children getting end of the year awards the morning of the shooting. some of their parents, their loved ones were at the school not knowing it would be the last time they saw their children. and tonight here, my interview with a young father, the video he showed me of his daughter fishing with him. and what he's vowing to do tonight in honor of his daughter. also tonight, we have now learned how long it took to take down the gunman after his first encounter with police here in uvalde. and the officers inside the school, border patrol, sheriffs, police. now we have learned a sheriff's deputy in that school helping to confront the gunman lost their own child in the shooting. the other question tonight,
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how many warning signs were missed? news this evening and those private messages. and with no driver's license and little money, how did he buy those guns? and what classmates are now saying about his behavior. matt gutman's interview with his grandfather. the call for action tonight across this country, echoing from texas to washington, d.c. governor abbott confronted on live tv. his democratic challenger, beto o'rourke, interrupting him. tonight, president biden asking lawmakers in washington, where is our backbone? where this stands tonight. a special edition of "world news tonight" begins now. and good evening tonight from texas. we are here in uvalde, a community in mourning.
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the mass shooting at the elementary school right behind me here, leaving so many parents, so many families would without their sons and daughters. 19 school children and two teachers were shot and killed. tonight here, we honor them, their names, their stories, the awards given to some of the students just hours before the shooting. this is the second deadliest school shooting in u.s. history now after sandy hook ten years ago. tonight, new reporting here on the 18-year-old suspect, salvador ramos. in fact, he turned 18 just nine days ago. and the next day, authorities say he bought his first ar-15-style rifle, days later, buying his second. and then a little more than a week after his birthday, showing up at the school right here behind us. tonight, we've learned in the hours before the attack, that he sent three private messages on facebook, signaling his plans. tonight, the memorial growing outside robb elementary school. the school year has now ended early. the choked up superintendant
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revealing the news that the year was over. we now know the rampage began here at the suspect's grandparents' house, where authorities say he shot his grandmother first. then, he took his grandparents' truck with no driver's license, crashing it near the school here before making his way inside. we have also learned that all of the victims were in two adjoining classrooms. the gunman barricading the door, and we have just learned it's now believed he was in the building anywhere from 40 minutes to an hour before being taken down. parents, of course, came running, looking for their children, looking for answers. many waiting until the midnight hours before getting official word. a massive show of law enforcement here. and most of the children eventually taken to the local civic center to be reunited with their families. but that's also where families waited for the children who did not come home. officials asking those parents for dna samples as the night wore on to help identify the children who did not survive this. tonight here, the faces of the fallen now coming in. some of the 19 school children who lost their lives and the two teachers who died trying to save them.
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of course, the question here tonight, were warning signs missed? and this evening, across this country, a call to act. but we begin tonight with what played out in this school right here behind me and the children in that classroom. tonight, inside the unspeakable horror. officers running to the scene, with the 18-year-old gunman already inside robb elementary school. where second, third, and fourth graders were in the middle of their day. authorities say he got in through a back door, slipping into a classroom, and opening fire on fourth graders and their two teachers. >> to all ems units, standby. do not attempt to get closer. we got shots fired. >> reporter: authorities believe he got into that school at 11:32 a.m. >> need to respond to south grove and mill street to establish a perimeter. >> reporter: authorities say the suspect, salvador ramos, a high school dropout here, turned 18 just nine days ago. tonight, the atf now saying just one day after his birthday, he bought an ar-15-style rifle.
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three days later, he bought a second one. and four days after that, he was here at the elementary school. tonight, texas governor greg abbott describing the horror that played out even before he arrived at the school, at the home where he lived with his grandparents. >> the first thing that happened was that the gunman shot his grandmother in the face. she then contacted police. >> reporter: a neighbor describing the grandmother with a gunshot wound to her forehead, helping her to dress the wound. tonight, she is in critical condition. and as all of this was playing out, governor abbott now revealing the suspect was posting chilling private messages on facebook. the first message, that he was going to shoot his grandmother. >> the second post was, "i shot my grandmother." the third post, maybe less than 15 minutes before arriving at the school, was, "i'm going to
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shoot an elementary school." >> reporter: the suspect's grandfather telling abc news, he had no idea his grandson had these weapons, and that he had no driver's license. still, taking off in their truck. >> the gunman fled, and as he was fleeing, he had an accident just outside of the elementary school and he ran into the school. >> reporter: authorities say on his way in, opening fire with school officers. the suspect, wearing tactical gear, getting into the back of the school. >> the gunman then entered a back door and went down two short hallways and then into a classroom on the left-hand side. the gunman entered into that classroom, and that classroom was connected internally to another classroom. >> reporter: authorities say the gunman then barricading himself inside that fourth grade classroom and began shooting. border patrol, police, sheriffs, all converging on that classroom. outside, parents racing to the school amid reports of an active shooter. a firefighter describing the parents and first responders
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pulling children through windows to get them out. back in that classroom, border patrol killing that gunman. and we learn ed today that one f those officers, a deputy sheriff, losing a daughter in the shooting. and the children who did get out, unable to erase what they saw, what they heard. fourth grader jordan liges. >> we just hear all kinds of gunshots going off, like nonstop, like constantly gunshots. and then we're over here all scared, on the ground fearing for our lives. >> reporter: the superintendent ending the school year early. >> my heart was broken today. we're a small community and we will need your prayers to get us through this. >> reporter: the school children evacuated. many taken to the civic center. some even taken to the funeral home, waiting to be reunited with their parents. and then the families waiting. the grief on their faces as the hours went by. consoling one another. pleading for answers
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and the remarkable moment -- pedro adame searching for his niece in the crowd of children being led inside, when suddenly, they spot one another. >> it's okay, we're right here, we're right here. okay? it's okay. we're right here, okay? hey, hey. we're right here, okay? hey, it's okay. we're right here. >> reporter: for so many others here, the reunions never came. tonight, these are the young lives stolen here in uvalde. amerie jo garza had just turned 10. and look at this image. holding an award for the honor roll. that award had just been given to her hours before the shooting. her family says she tried to call 911 during the shooting. tonight, her father, alfred garza. what would you want people to know about your daughter? >> that -- i mean, she was the best person that i know. full of life. gone too soon. always smiling.
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very productive. she was her own self. she was her own person. she was a leader. she didn't try to be like anybody. she wanted to do things the way she wanted to do them. and that's -- that's what i admired most about my daughter. she was not a follower. she was a leader. >> reporter: she shows me the video of them fishing together he now cherishes. >> do you know what you're doing? do you know what you're doing? >> no. >> reporter: overnight here, adolfo cruz, a grandfather waiting for word on his granddaughter, eliahana cruz torres. >> i just took a little time to go to the hospital and see if we could find out anything over there and nothing. >> reporter: his granddaughter did not survive. there was xavier james lopez who was 10. a family member saying xavier's mom was at that awards ceremony just hours before the shooting. she had no idea it would be her final time with her son. his grandmother on the pain. >> just so hard. you send your kids to school and thinking they're going to make it back home and then they're
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not. >> reporter: annabelle rodriguez was 10. she died along with her cousin, jacklyn jaylen cazares, also 10 years old. seen here in her first communion just weeks ago. her father telling abc news, "my little girl was full of life and touched so many people. she had the biggest heart. jackie was the one that would go out of her way to help anyone." 10-year-old rojelio torres. his mother telling us he was a "very smart and loving child." there was 10-year-old makenna lee elrod. jayce carmelo luevanos, 10 years old, and jailah nicole silguero, 11. they were cousins, too. the family telling us, "they were nothing but loving baby angels, always had a smile on their face, just full of life." uziyah garcia. his grandfather saying he was "the sweetest little boy that i've ever known." and tonight here, the teachers. irma garcia. it was her 23rd year teaching at the school, about to celebrate
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her 25th wedding anniversary with her husband. she taught the children with fourth grade teacher eva mireles, at the school for 17 years. she loved hiking and the outdoors. and her students loved her. tonight, the growing memorial outside the school here. the flowers on the school sign. the officers just off behind it. and that father who showed his daughter fishing with him, and his vow tonight to always honor her. >> we have to honor her and make sure that we -- we do good and -- you know, and from this day forward, i want to live my life fr my daughter that can be here to live hers. you know, i want to try to do as much as i can, the best i can, as positive as i can. and i just want to do what would make her happy. just live my life how she would want me to live it and just do her proud, you know, do her proud and just live the life that she can't live anymore. >> reporter: that's your purpose now. >> that's my purpose now. >> the father determined to honor his daughter. the parents here, the famlies
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here, that must now somehow find a way forward without their cildren. this community is a small, proud community, tight-knit and we have learned tonight that among the law enforcement taking down the suspect inside the school here, a deputy sheriff who lost their own child. abc's mireya villarreal right here in uvalde. >> reporter: tonight, as the tight-knit town of uvalde mourns and grieves, we are learning that for many of the responding officers, this was personal. many had their own children in harm's way. the sheriff's department -- >> one deputy sheriff lost a daughter in that school. >> reporter: and border patrol. >> we had one agent that lost his granddaughter. we had others that lost extended family. >> reporter: border patrol sector chief jason owens telling me more than 80 agents responded to the scene. >> they put themselves between this crazy person and these innocent children. whether they were pulling the
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children to safety from windows, whether they were clearing rooms, whether they were actively engaging that suspect, each and every person played their role, and they did it with all of their heart. >> reporter: families taken to the local civic center, giving samples of their dna, waiting for hours for officials to confirm whether or not their child had died. a long and painful process, in a small town where there's less than ten physicians available to deal with this kind of tragedy. and a bit of good news. all of the patients treated here in uvalde have been released. of the six sent to san antonio, only one is still in serious condition. david? >> mireya villarreal right here on the scene for us again tonight. mireya, thank you. we turn now to the investigation, tracking salvador ramos' final steps, the purchase of those assault-style weapons right after turning 18 just days ago. and tonight here, matt gutman interviews the suspect's grandfather, who says the family had no idea he had those weapons. >> reporter: tonight, investigators say the suspected
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texas elementary school shooter bought those two ar-style rifles on two separate days. the first one on may 17th, just a day after his 18th birthday. and the other, three days later, on may 20th. both rifles purchased just days before the rampage at oasis outback, a local sporting goods store. authorities say the 18-year-old suspect legally purchased those ars without a license, as well as multiple 30-bullet magazines and at least 375 rounds. the sale of large-capacity magazines and bullets is not regulated in texas. earlier, officials said the gunman was wearing body armor, now correcting themselves, saying it was tactical gear. a vest designed to carry ammunition, but not protective plates or fabric. his grandfather telling me he knew nothing about the weapons. >> i didn't know he had weapons or nothing or this or that. if i would have known, i would have reported it. >> reporter: you would have reported your own grandson. >> yes. because i'm against all that. >> reporter: tonight, texas governor greg abbott saying the
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suspect had no known mental health history, insisting that law enforcement had no warnings. >> there was no meaningful forewarning of this crime. >> reporter: tonight, investigators are combing through the suspect's social media history, where he allegedly posted videos of himself abusing animals, as well as photos of guns. david, investigators tell me they have to get through hundreds of interviews. this is going to take days. in the meantime, they have a number of outstanding questions, like, for how long had the suspect planned this attack? what precipitated it, how did he get proficiency in the use of those weapons? who knew about them? and who might have been able to put a stop to this? david? >> so many questions. matt gutman here in texas with us, as well. thank you, matt. we turn now to the call to act tonight, echoing from texas to washington, d.c. here in texas today, governor greg abbott was confronted on live tv. his democratic challenger beto o'rourke interrupting him not long after the governor said he had asked so many leaders here
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on the ground what went wrong. tonight, president biden asking lawmakers, where is our backbone? rachel scott on the hill tonight. >> reporter: republican texas governor greg abbott insisting today that guns were not the problem in the mass shooting that killed 19 children and two teachers. >> i asked the sheriff and others an open-ended question. what is the problem here? and they were straightforward and emphatic. they said, we have a mental -- we have a problem with mental health illness in this community. >> reporter: but interrupting abbott's press conference, former democratic congressman beto o'rourke, who is running for governor himself. >> let him talk. >> the time to stop the next shooting is right now and you are doing nothing. you're offering us nothing. you said this was not predictable. this is totally predictable. when you choose not to do anything -- >> sir, you are out of line. >> reporter: o'rourke escorted out. >> this is on you until you choose to do something different. this will continue to happen.
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>> reporter: in washington, senator chris murphy of connecticut, where 26 people, including 20 children, were gunned down at sandy hook elementary school, challenging his republican colleagues to act. >> what are we doing? why are you here, if not to solve a problem as existential as this? >> reporter: polls show the american people want change. 56% support an assault weapons ban. 86% support a red flag law, allowing authorities to temporarily take guns away from people determined to be dangerous. and 89% support background checks. still, for most republicans on capitol hill, those issues are nonstarters. the majority of americans support expanded background checks. why not support it? >> unfortunately, what some people do is immediately want to take people's second amendment rights away. and i'm not willing to do that. >> reporter: many republicans didn't want to talk about the
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issue at all. do you support expanded background checks? the majority of americans support it, do you support it? the majority of americans support background checks. do you support it? in 2018, texas governor greg abbott did ask state lawmakers to consider a red flag law, but when republicans refused, he backed down. and since then, texas has actually loosened its gun laws, david. >> rachel scott live in washington tonight. rachel, thank you. and there was a moment last night after news of the school shooting, nba coach steve kerr of the golden state warriors in dallas for a playoff game, the normal news conference, but then he came out and said, he wasn't going to talk about basketball. >> now we have children murdered at school. when are we going to do something? and 50 senators in washington are going to hold us hostage -- do you realize that 90% of americans, regardless of political party, want background check, universal background check? 90% of us.
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we are being held hostage by 50 senators in washington who refuse to even put it to a vote, despite what we, the american people, want. they won't vote on it because they want to hold onto their own power. it's pathetic. i've had enough. >> steve kerr, a longtime gun control advocate, lost his father in a terror attack in the middle east in 1984. when we come back tonight from texas, what we are just learning from the white house. president biden and the first lady and their plans now to come lady and their plans now to come to texas. chronic migraine— 15 or more headache days a month, each lasting 4 hours or more you're not the only one with questions about botox®. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine before they even start—with about 10 minutes of treatment once every 3 months. so, ask your doctor if botox® is right for you, and if a sample is available. effects of botox® may spread hours to weeks after injection causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away, as difficulty swallowing,
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vitamin and supplement brand. the first lady dr. jill biden was asked today, will you be going to texas, she said, of course. in the coming days, the president and the first lady plan to visit. let's get right to our chief white house correspondent cecilia vega. and cecilia, we were both on the air when they were in buffalo just a week and a half ago. >> reporter: yeah, and this is first and forefront at the president's mind. he said he's going to be taking this trip with the first lady to meet with families there, david. but today, president biden is pushing for what he is calling common sense gun reform. he said the second amendment is not absolute. he also wants the senate to confirm his nominee for atf director. that agency that enforces gun laws in this country and regulates licensing has not had a permanent director in seven years, david. >> cecilia vega with that breaking headline tonight. cecilia, thank you. and cecilia, as you know, the fbi director also had a blunt warning today about protecting america's schools, and we'll have that in a moment. , being yourself can be tough when you have severe asthma.
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(vo) with 5g ultra wideband in many more cities, you get up to 10 times the speed at no extra cost. verizon is going ultra, so your business can get more. dan: next at 6:00, the latest on the shooting in texas. experts look into the unexplained death of apg&e worker. why you are being warned to avoid some tonight, a final image. one of the young faces lost here, makenna lee elrod. surrounded by flowers outside the school. that memorial growing tonight right over my shoulder here behind us. i'll see you tomorrow. good night. >> tonight team coverage on the
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school shooting in uvalde, texas and what is being done in california to prevent another tragedy. >> there are no do overs. the scene has got. >> part two of our investigation into the unexplained death of a pg&e worker on the job. experts dig into what happened and cast doubt on the a story. >> record-setting heat for the second straight day, but big cooldown is coming, i will have the forecast. abc 7 news at 6:00 starts right now. >> building a better bay area, moving forward, finding solutions this is abc7 news. >> hearts are broken. for these families and for these kids. ama: broken hearts over lost lives. 19 children and two of their elementary school children. dan: thank you for joining us. this tragedy is. weighing heavily on all of us. yesterday shooting at robb
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elementary, the worst since sandy hook nearly a decade ago. ama: the victims are mostly fourth-graders, some had just turned 10 years old. the gunman had just turned 18 a week before. dan: that allowed him to purchase two assault rifles legally and is part of what is fueling the debate over gun control laws. ama: tonight you will hear what governor newsom plans to change here in california. dan: let's go to our reporter and our sister station in houston. she is a very latest. reporter: we have learned new information about what the shooter was doing in the moments before coming to the elementary school and opening fire. we know he was at his grandmothers house where he shot her in the face and took her truck. before coming up here, he posted to social media, morning of his plans to come to the school. he crash the truck nearby, ran to the school property where he was confronted by law enforcement. there was a shootout. the shooter got into the shooter -- school from aac