UPDATE 10:30am | Elsa Avila, a former fourth-grade teacher at Robb Elementary, recalls the moment she was shot in her classroom on May 24, 2022. She says her students followed their active shooter training and quietly comforted her while they hid.
“They were staying quiet. They were hugging each other. They were helping each other stay quiet. Some of them were tapping me telling me, ‘Miss, miss, we love you. We love you. You’re gonna be okay,” recalled Avila. “They were trying to comfort me. I couldn’t comfort them and I didn’t want them to see me die there in front of them. I was very very proud of them. They did everything they were supposed to do. They followed their training.”
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CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas – Jurors heard another full day of testimony in the trial of former Uvalde officer Adrian Gonzales, one of two officers charged in the Robb Elementary shooting that killed 19 children and two teachers.
The testimony gave jurors a firsthand look at the immediate aftermath of the Uvalde school shooting.
Texas Rangers and Uvalde school district employees were on the stand Monday. They testified about what they saw inside Robb Elementary and how they reacted in the moment.
Some of the testimony is difficult to hear.
RELATED: Uvalde School Shooting Trial: Teacher recalls getting shot, taunted by gunman
Cameras focused on Adrian Gonzales during the playing of 9-1-1 calls from the day of the shooting.
“Get in your rooms, get in your rooms!”
One witness, who was in charge of the surveillance cameras at Robb Elementary, described what they recorded. Some of this hallway video had only been seen by people inside the courtroom.
RELATED: Defense says three other officers were on scene before shooter entered Robb
Uvalde teacher who survived classroom shooting testifies about seeing gunman
The gunman killed 19 students and two teachers.
Arnulfo Reyes, who was the lone survivor from Room 111, was shot on the arm and back and said he was taunted by 18-year-old gunman Salvador Ramos.
“I looked at my door and that’s when I saw him … a black shadow. The black shadow was holding a gun. I just saw the fire come out of the gun,” Reyes testified. “He shot at me and hit me in my arm. That’s when I fell to the ground.”
“When I fell, he came around and he shot the kids,” he said.
Reyes said Ramos turned back around and shot him in the back. He prayed “and I gave myself to the Lord … and waited for everything to be over.”
Reyes said the gunman at one point walked into the adjoining classroom, where he said he heard a student say, “Officer, we’re in here,” before he heard more shooting.
Reyes said Ramos also taunted him while he tried to pretend he was dead.
Reyes was a teacher in Room 111. None of the children in his classroom survived.
Just before Reyes testified, the court watched the surveillance video of Ramos entering the school and start shooting. The judge had warned the courtroom the images and sounds would be graphic.
Gonzales showed no emotion on his face as emergency calls to police and a woman can be heard screaming “get in your room!” He appeared to flinch when the first loud shots rang out in the hallway. He also covered his mouth with his left hand.
Gonzales was among the first of more than 370 federal, state and local officers to arrive at the school. It would take more than an hour for a tactical team to go into a classroom and kill the gunman.
The trial in Corpus Christi, Texas, is tightly focused on Gonzales’ actions. Prosecutors allege he abandoned his active shooter training and did not try to engage or distract the gunman while he was still outside the school. They said Gonzales failed again minutes later when a group of officers went inside the school only to retreat when they came under heavy gunfire.
While much of the trial has been focused on events outside the school when the attack started, prosecutors are using the carnage inside the classroom as the ultimate result of what they said was Gonzales’ failure to stop the gunman when he had a chance.
At one point, prosecutors showed the school portraits of each of the schoolchildren and asked Reyes to read their names and say whether they died or survived.
Reyes was not asked about Gonzales during questioning by prosecutors, and mentioned only encountering a Border Patrol officer when the shooting stopped.
At the start of their cross-examination, defense attorneys noted the doors to the outside of the school, as well as Reyes’ classroom, were unlocked in violation of school policy. Reyes said he’d believed his classroom door was locked.
The opening days of the trial included dramatic replays of the initial emergency calls, testimony from teachers who huddled with terrified students, and the mother of one of the victims recounting how her daughter had asked to leave school early that day.
Jurors have also seen graphic photos from inside the school and classrooms. Prosecutors noted how students made 911 calls from inside the classroom with the gunman.
The trial is a rare case in which a police officer could be convicted of allegedly failing to act to stop a crime and protect lives.
Gonzales and former Uvalde schools Police Chief Pete Arredondo are the only two responding officers that day to face charges. Arredondo’s trial has not yet been set.