Public Safety

Contrite, But Defiant DPS Chief Won’t Resign

Texas Department of Public Safety Director Steve McCraw faced the families of Robb Elementary School shooting victims last week in a public meeting. Despite admissions of mistakes at the incident which claimed 21 lives and injured 18 others, McCraw defended the agency.

“If DPS as an institution — as an institution — failed the families, failed the school or failed the community of Uvalde, then absolutely I need to go,” McCraw said during a heated Public Safety Commission meeting according to the Texas Tribune. “But I can tell you this right now: DPS as an institution, right now, did not fail the community — plain and simple.”

His words did little to mollify the crowd, and McGraw further enraged them when he said he was “sorry for your loss.” The crowd openly called for his resignation. Lives Robbed, a group founded after the killing to push for gun reform and school safety, called the public meeting a “glorified press conference.”

“Today, The Department of Public Safety promised an update into their investigation of the Robb Elementary School shooting,” the statement read. “That did not happen. Instead, in a bait and switch, they hosted a glorified press conference and once again refused to accept responsibility for their failures.”

Since the massacre, DPS has been accused of botching the police response that allowed the shooter to continue his rampage. A report from the Texas House Committee on the crime baldly stated that DPS should have assumed command of the situation, but did not. There were 91 members of DPS on the scene, as well as 149 United States Border Patrol Officers.

“There was an overall lackadaisical approach by law enforcement at the scene,” the report concludes. “For many, that was because they were given and relied upon inaccurate information. For others, they had enough information to know better.”

McCraw did admit that the incident was not adequately treated as an active shooter, and that officers waited too long for equipment like shields before trying to stop the killing. Multiple DPS officers are being investigated for their role in the shooting, and a report is expected by the end of the year. One officer, Sgt. Juan Maldonado, who was the first to arrive at the school, has been fired.

Nonetheless, the public meeting only seems to have made the families of the Robb Elementary shooting angrier. McGraw’s defense of DPS fell on deaf ears. An uncle of one victim called what was being said lies and misinformation, and said that DPS’ deflection was preventing everyone from beginning the healing process.

That there was profound incompetency at Robb Elementary that day no one seems to dispute. However, state agencies from the bottom up have repeatedly passed the buck when it comes to assigning blame for those failures or addressing the next attempted shooting with new policies. Frazzled and contrite as McGraw appeared to be during the meeting, he clearly has no intention of giving up his post, even when it is outright demanded from the survivors of Texas’ worst school shooting ever.

Jef Rouner

Jef Rouner is an award-winning freelance journalist, the author of The Rook Circle, and a member of The Black Math Experiment. He lives in Houston where he spends most of his time investigating corruption and strange happenings. Jef has written for Houston Press, Free Press Houston, and Houston Chronicle.

Recent Posts

Glitter, Grit, And Government: The Drag Show Educating Texas Voters

Every Tuesday night, a downtown Austin dance…

9 hours ago

Millions, Math, And Mayhem In The Lone Star State, Led By “The Joker”

In the spring of 2023, a high-stakes…

10 hours ago

HB 5580 Would Force Sheriffs Into ICE Agreements, Critics Warn of Civil Rights Fallout

On Monday, the Texas House Subcommittee on County & Regional Government heard testimony on House…

11 hours ago

Texas State Budget Heads to Closed-Door Negotiations, But Critics Say Texans Are Paying for Partisan Politics, Not Public Priorities

Following its passage by the Texas House last Friday, the $337 billion biennial budget, Senate…

23 hours ago

Elon Musk’s Lawyer Runs For Texas AG As Ken Paxton Eyes Senate

John Bash, former U.S. attorney and current…

1 day ago

From Bitcoin To AI: Tech Boom Tests Limits Of Texas Grid

The Texas power grid is entering a…

1 day ago

This website uses cookies.