CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas – Jurors returned to the courtroom Thursday morning after attorneys for a former Uvalde school district police officer had their mistrial motion denied Wednesday.
KSAT is livestreaming Day 3 of Gonzales’ trial from Corpus Christi in this article and on KSAT Plus. Delays are possible. If there is not a livestream available, please check back at a later time.
Viewer discretion is advised. Details in this trial are expected to be graphic and difficult to hear.
Presiding Judge Sid Harle called Wednesday’s hearing without the presence of jurors after the defense team of ex-Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District police officer Adrian Gonzales noted an inconsistency between former Robb Elementary School teacher Stephanie Hale’s testimony to the Texas Rangers four days after the shooting and the testimony provided in court Tuesday afternoon.
The defense accused the prosecution of withholding or failing to disclose information to them. Uvalde County District Attorney Christina Mitchell took exception to the defense’s accusation.
During a short Wednesday hearing, the defense asked Harle to declare a mistrial, which he denied.
Hale is expected to return to the stand Thursday morning.
Family members of Jackie Cazares, a 9-year-old killed in the 2022 shooting, shared their frustrations with the Uvalde County District Attorney’s Office before Wednesday’s hearing.
“We are very disappointed in the (Uvalde County) DA (Christina Mitchell),” Manuel Rizo said before the hearing, in part. “Just learning what we learned yesterday — it caught us, again, by surprise, you know? I mean, if there was one word that I could say about their team (Uvalde County DA’s Office), is ‘incompetent.’”
“100%,” Julissa Rizo said while nodding in agreement.
“It’s hard to remain positive. It really is,” Manuel Rizo continued, in part. “We have a lot of anxiety. We’re concerned, but we can’t give up. We’re hoping for the best.”
Due to his response to the Robb Elementary School shooting in Uvalde, Gonzales has been accused and charged with endangering the lives of 29 children on May 24, 2022.
A complete timeline from Tuesday’s court proceedings can be found here.
Below is a timeline of events from Thursday’s proceedings from the Nueces County Courthouse.
9:07 a.m. – Jurors entered the courtroom.
9:08 a.m. – Adrian Gonzales’ co-defense attorney Jason Goss resumed cross-examination of former Robb Elementary School teacher Stephanie Hale.
9:09 a.m. – Goss played Hale’s interview with the Texas Rangers four days after the May 24, 2022, shooting before the court.
Background
Gonzales, 52, is one of two now-former Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District police officers charged with child endangerment regarding the law enforcement response to the deadliest school shooting in Texas history. Gonzales is facing 29 child endangerment charges: 19 represent the children killed in the shooting, and the other 10 represent the children injured in the shooting.
An 18-year-old gunman also killed two teachers at the school on May 24, 2022.
The other officer, former Uvalde CISD Police Chief Pete Arredondo, has yet to go to trial in his child endangerment case. Arredondo is facing 10 child endangerment charges.
Uvalde County District Attorney Christina Mitchell is prosecuting the Gonzales case, but she appointed Bill Turner as special prosecutor. Turner was the former district attorney in Brazos County.
San Antonio-area attorney and former Bexar County District Attorney Nico LaHood leads Gonzales’ defense team. The team is rounded out by fellow attorneys Jason Goss and Gary Hillier.
In August 2025, Gonzales requested a venue change for the trial.
In the motion, Gonzales’ defense team argued that he cannot receive a fair trial by a jury in Uvalde County due to the impact the massacre had on members of the community.
“This horrific tragedy touched every member of the Uvalde community,” LaHood said at the time. “It would be impossible to gather a jury that would not view the evidence through their own pain and grief.”
In October 2025, LaHood confirmed to KSAT that the trial venue was changed from Uvalde County to Nueces County.
The state is expected to call approximately 60 witnesses to the stand. Court records indicate some of those asked to be witnesses include the Bexar County Medical Examiner’s Office, officers from other responding law enforcement agencies, medical personnel and some parents of school shooting victims.
Child endangerment charges are considered a state jail felony. Upon a potential conviction, Gonzales could be sentenced between six months and two years in a state jail.
Judge Sid Harle is the presiding judge in this case. If convicted, Gonzales also elected to have Harle determine his sentence instead of the jury.
More coverage of the Adrian Gonzales trial on KSAT:
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