Current:Home > MarketsUvalde school shooting victims' families announce $2 million settlement with Texas city and new lawsuits -Secure Growth Solutions
Uvalde school shooting victims' families announce $2 million settlement with Texas city and new lawsuits
View
Date:2025-04-18 08:19:21
Family members of Uvalde school shooting victims reached a $2 million settlement with the Texas city over the deadly 2022 rampage, officials announced Wednesday. The group also said they're filing lawsuits against dozens of Texas Department of Public Safety officers and Uvalde's school district.
The announcement comes nearly two years after a teenage gunman killed 19 students and two teachers at Robb Elementary School. Law enforcement officers killed the gunman in a classroom after waiting more than an hour to confront him, which was heavily criticized in the wake of the shooting.
In the settlement announced Wednesday, the city of Uvalde will pay a total of $2 million to the families of 17 children killed in the shooting and two children who survived, according to a statement from the families' attorneys.
"Pursuing further legal action against the City could have plunged Uvalde into bankruptcy, something that none of the families were interested in as they look for the community to heal," the statement said.
The money will come from the city's insurance coverage, attorney Josh Koskoff told reporters at a news conference.
"These families could have pursued a lawsuit against the city, and there's certainly grounds for a lawsuit," Koskoff said. "Let's face it, sadly, we all saw what we saw … but instead of suing the city and jeopardizing the finances of anybody, the families have accepted simply the insurance."
The city said the settlement will allow people to remember the shooting while "moving forward together as a community to bring healing and restoration to all those affected."
"We will forever be grateful to the victims' families for working with us over the past year to cultivate an environment of community-wide healing that honors the lives and memories of those we tragically lost," the city said in a statement. "May 24th is our community's greatest tragedy."
The families were also working on a separate settlement with Uvalde County, Koskoff said.
Javier Cazares, whose 9-year-old daughter Jackie Cazares was killed in the shooting, said the last two years have been unbearable.
"We all know who took our children's lives, but there was an obvious systemic failure out there on May 24," Cazares said. "The whole world saw that. No amount of money is worth the lives of our children. Justice and accountability has always been my main concern. We've been let down so many times. The time has come to do the right thing."
The settlement also includes the Uvalde Police Department committing to provide enhanced training for police officers and implement a new standard for officers to be developed in coordination with the U.S. Justice Department, according to the families' attorneys. The city also committed to supporting mental health services for the families, survivors and community members, creating a committee to coordinate with the families on a permanent memorial and establishing May 24 as an annual day of remembrance, in addition to taking other measures.
The families are also taking new legal action against 92 state Department of Public Safety officers and the school district, including former Robb Elementary School principal Mandy Gutierrez and Pete Arredondo, the school district's police chief who was fired months after the shooting.
"Law enforcement did not treat the incident as an active shooter situation, despite clear knowledge that there was an active shooter inside," Wednesday's statement said. "... The shooter was able to continue the killing spree for over an hour while helpless families waited anxiously outside the school."
Koskoff said the state's officers on the scene could have done more to respond to the shooting. They acted "as if they had nothing to do, as if they didn't know how to shoot somebody, as if they weren't heavily armed and the most well-trained," Koskoff said.
A Justice Department report released in January called the police response a failure.
"Had the law enforcement agencies followed generally accepted practices ... lives would have been saved and people would have survived," Attorney General Merrick Garland told reporters at the time.
At Wednesday's news conference, Koskoff said the families would "down the line" be suing the federal government, noting that many federal law enforcement officers also responded to the shooting.
"You had over 150 some-odd federal officers there who also were there and stood around until one or more breached the room at 77 minutes," Koskoff said. "Sure, that was a heroic act, it was a heroic act 77 minutes late."
- In:
- Texas
- Uvalde
- Uvalde Shooting
Alex Sundby is a senior editor at CBSNews.com. In addition to editing content, Alex also covers breaking news, writing about crime and severe weather as well as everything from multistate lottery jackpots to the July Fourth hot dog eating contest.
TwitterveryGood! (8198)
Related
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Wholesale price inflation accelerated in August from historically slow pace
- 30 years after Oslo, Israeli foreign minister rejects international dictates on Palestinian issue
- Missouri lawmakers fail to override Gov. Parson’s vetoes, and instead accept pared-back state budget
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- France bans iPhone 12 sales over high radiation-emission levels
- Utah GOP Sen. Mitt Romney, former presidential candidate and governor, won’t seek reelection in 2024
- Suriname prepares for its first offshore oil project that is expected to ease deep poverty
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Offshore Wind’s Rough Summer, Explained
Ranking
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Everleigh LaBrant Reacts to Song Like Taylor Swift Going Viral Amid Online Criticism
- Firefighters fear PFAS in their gear could be contributing to rising cancer cases
- HBO's 'Real Time with Bill Maher' to return during Writers Guild strike
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Brazilian Indigenous women use fashion to showcase their claim to rights and the demarcation of land
- Missouri lawmakers fail to override Gov. Parson’s vetoes, and instead accept pared-back state budget
- Mitt Romney says he's not running for reelection to the Senate in 2024
Recommendation
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Palestinian man who fled Lebanon seeking safety in Libya was killed with his family by floods
Communities across Appalachia band together for first-ever 13-state Narcan distribution event
Defense set to begin in impeachment trial of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton
Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
Rema won at the MTV VMAs, hit streaming record: What to know about the Nigerian artist
New US sanctions target workarounds that let Russia get Western tech for war
Inflation rose in August amid higher prices at the pump