Former Uvalde officer waited as ‘slaughter’ began, prosecutors say; defense cites chaotic scene

FILE — The former Uvalde police officer Adrian Gonzales, center, leaves the Judicial District Courthouse in Uvalde, Texas, on July 25, 2024. Gonzales is facing a total of 29 counts at his trial, which is set to begin with jury selection on Monday, Jan. 5, 2026. (Ilana Panich-Linsman/The New York Times)
Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

The trial of one ​of the first police officers on the ‌scene of the 2022 attack at a Texas elementary school that killed 19 students and two teachers opened ‌on Tuesday, with prosecutors accusing him of criminally failing to try to stop the slaughter, while the defense said the officer did the best he could at the chaotic and confusing scene.

Former Uvalde school district police officer Adrian Gonzales, 52, was one of 376 officers from local, state and federal agencies who responded to the shooting and have since come under sharp criticism for waiting 77 minutes before entering a Robb Elementary classroom where the gunman was holed up. Teachers and children made lengthy ‍calls to 911 emergency services, saying they were in the room with the gunman and surrounded by bodies.

Gonzales, who had spent a decade as a Uvalde city police officer before joining the school district’s force about a year before the shooting, was charged in 2024 with 29 counts of child endangerment, according to his indictment, which said that he “failed to engage, distract, and delay the shooter” and that he also failed “to follow his active shooter training to respond to gun fire by ​advancing toward the gun fire.”

Each count carries the possibility of two years in prison. Gonzales pleaded not guilty on Tuesday ​before opening statements began in the courtroom in Corpus Christi, Texas, where the trial was moved after the defense successfully argued he could not get a fair trial in Uvalde.

Special prosecutor Bill Turner told the jury during his opening statement that within seconds after arriving at the school, a teacher told Gonzales where the gunman was and that he had relayed that information over his radio. Within seconds, the gunman was firing shots with ‍his AR-style rifle from outside the school building into classrooms, and then made his way into the school through a door that had been propped open. He began firing ​inside the school, while Gonzales remained outside.

“Adrian Gonzales does nothing more than mike his microphone and tell other officers what’s going on,” Turner said, repeatedly choking back tears as he spoke.

The children inside the building were hiding and waiting for officers to come to their aid, the prosecutor added, but Gonzales and other police waited outside “as the slaughter begins.”

Two defense attorneys, in their opening statement, emphasized the chaotic scene and said that at no point did Gonzales see the gunman or fully understand where the gunman was, making it difficult to confront him.

The gunman, who had wrecked his car into a culvert near the school just minutes before he opened fire inside classrooms, had at first fired on a funeral parlor across the street from the school. When Gonzales arrived soon after, he did not understand the gunman was intent on killing students, but rather thought he was trying to escape the scene of the crash and funeral parlor shooting, the attorneys said.

They said the gunman entered the school about one minute after Gonzales arrived on campus and drove straight toward the only person he saw outside the building — a teacher who they said gave him incorrect information on the shooter’s whereabouts. Gonzales was one of the first three officers to enter the school.