2024 Gun Violence Data El Paso Crime Rate Statistics
What the Walmart Shooting Taught Us
The August 3, 2019 shooting is the defining security event in El Paso’s recent history. Its operational lessons apply far beyond this city.
The timeline tells the story. At approximately 10:39 a.m., the shooter walked into the Walmart carrying a rifle in plain sight. No detection system flagged the weapon. No automated alert went to shoppers or staff. No lockdown protocol engaged. The first warning anyone had was gunfire².
Active shooting lasted approximately six minutes. EPPD officers arrived within roughly six minutes of the first 911 calls, which is fast by any standard⁵. But by the time officers reached the building, the shooter had already exited. He was apprehended in the parking lot without further incident.
Here’s the math that should drive every security conversation: six minutes of violence, six minutes to arrival. Even an exemplary police response couldn’t close the gap. Twenty-three people died in that window. That gap exists everywhere. El Paso’s experience simply made it impossible to ignore.
Response Time Reality Check
EPPD serves one of the most geographically sprawling cities in the country. El Paso stretches more than 250 square miles along the Rio Grande in a long, narrow footprint that creates inherent coverage challenges³.
The department has operated below recommended staffing levels for years. Competition from federal agencies in the region (CBP, ICE, and DEA all recruit from the same talent pool), plus the nationwide law enforcement staffing shortage, have kept the force below full strength. The city has invested in hiring incentives and compensation increases, but building a department to adequate levels takes years, not months³.
That’s not a knock on EPPD. Their response to the Walmart shooting proved the department can mobilize fast in a crisis. But on a routine day, covering 250-plus square miles with stretched personnel means response times to individual facilities vary by location and call volume. Organizations relying on police response as their primary security plan are relying on a variable, not a constant.
What’s Happening in Schools
El Paso school districts invested in significant security upgrades following the 2019 shooting. Camera systems were expanded, access control protocols strengthened, and threat assessment procedures established across multiple districts⁶.
Then Uvalde happened. The May 2022 shooting at Robb Elementary School, roughly 570 miles east of El Paso, killed 19 students and two teachers and exposed catastrophic failures in both security infrastructure and law enforcement coordination⁷. For every Texas school district, Uvalde made what was already urgent feel existential.
The challenge facing El Paso schools is the same one confronting schools everywhere: physical security measures are necessary but not sufficient. Locked doors work until someone props one open. Camera systems that record but don’t detect provide evidence after an incident, not a warning before one. What’s shifted since 2019 and Uvalde is the recognition that detection needs to be active and automated, not passive and reviewed after the fact.
Healthcare and Government Facilities
El Paso’s healthcare system and government institutions face security demands shaped by the city’s unique position. William Beaumont Army Medical Center, multiple regional hospitals, and numerous federal facilities tied to border operations all require continuous public accessibility alongside meaningful security.
You can’t lock down an emergency department the way you secure a school during a drill. Government offices serving the public must remain open. For these environments, the security model has to detect threats at the perimeter rather than respond once they’ve breached interior spaces.