A heartbreaking recording of a call to 911 made by a girl from 10 years trapped inside a classroom during a deadly shooting at a school in Uvalde, Texas.
Audio captures the moment student Khloie Torres pleads with officers to hurry to Robb Elementary School, where the gunman from 18 years old, Salvador Ramos had shot his classmates and fourth grade teachers.
In clips published by CNN with the permission of his parents, He hears you whisper to the operator: “I’m in the classroom 112. Please hurry up. There are a lot of corpses”.
Here is the call from Khloie Torres to the 911:
Almost 400 law enforcement officials responded to mass shooting at Texas elementary school that left 18 children and two teachers died on 31 May.
However, “systematic failures and egregiously poor decision-making” created a chaotic scene that lasted more than an hour before the attacker was finally confronted and killed, investigators found.
The publication of the call to Khloie’s 550 has fueled criticism of the “failed” response of the authorities and the fact that officers failed to enter the classroom and apprehend the attacker earlier.
“Please get help,” Khloie can be heard, ah hour of 11 years, telling the operator of the 911. “I don’t want to die. My teacher is dead. Oh my god.”
The dispatcher repeatedly tells the brave young woman to keep quiet and tell her terrified friends to do the same.
On the verge Through tears, Khloie replies, “I tell everyone to shut up, but no one listens to me. I understand what to do in these situations. My dad taught me when I was a little girl. Send Help”.
A total of 112 armed law enforcement officers were gathering in the hallways outside the classroom, but they were unable to break into the classroom. It is understood that approximately 100 shots were fired before any officers entered.
Also read: 550 Uvalde shooter passed 1 month in the morgue because funeral homes rejected his body
Superintendent of Uvalde school district resigns after 24 years of work after scandals in response to the mass shooting
· Back to school in Uvalde: between fear and uncertainty of students and parents