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Texas School Shooting Report Gives New Detail On Jaime Gonzalez's Death

Jaime Gonzalez

By CHRISTOPHER SHERMAN   02/14/12 01:49 PM ET  AP

McALLEN, Texas -- A police sergeant gave the order to "take him out" and an armed teen was fatally shot after he turned toward another student in the hallway of a Texas middle school, according to a report released by the state attorney general.

The new report provides the most detail yet on the death of Jaime Gonzalez, 15. He was shot Jan. 4 by Brownsville police who responded to a call about a student at the school brandishing a handgun.

Texas requires police to file a report with the attorney general's office within 30 days of someone dying in police custody. The report on Gonzalez was first obtained by The Brownsville Herald.

Two officers with semi-automatic rifles fired in response to the sergeant's order, and Gonzalez was hit twice, in the chest and the abdomen. He had been holding a realistic-looking pellet gun.

The report confirms officers' earlier statements that Gonzalez pointed the gun at them but also raises the possibility that he fired. The other student told investigators he believed Gonzalez had fired at police, and crime scene technicians recovered evidence that suggested Gonzalez fired at officers during an initial encounter near the school entrance. The report does not specify what the evidence was.

Police said Gonzalez did not appear to be intoxicated or exhibit mental health problems, but he repeatedly ignored their orders to drop his gun.

When police first peered through the school entrance and saw Gonzalez in the hall outside the office, the gun was tucked in his waistband. An officer approached, and Gonzalez pulled out a "black semi-automatic pistol, resembling a Glock handgun." Only later did police discover it was an air gun that fired pellets.

At one point, Gonzalez pointed the gun at his temple and then aimed it at police. One officer fired a shot high into the glass of the school's locked door. Officers believe Gonzalez fired too before retreating down a hallway. Officers turned down the hallway and saw Gonzalez at the end. Another student, identified only as "JG" in the report, was in a corner about 13 feet to Gonzalez's left.

"He (the student) was terrified because he was right against the wall, palms in touching the wall along with his entire body; his eyes looked really big as he looked back and forth between us and the suspect," Officer Raul Cazares wrote in his report.

Officers continued to order Gonzalez to put down the gun.

"I feared for the child against the wall and/or that the suspect would run off into the school and hurt the students or the staff," Cazares wrote.

As officers approached, Gonzalez swayed back and forth, sometimes with the gun at his side and once up toward his head.

Police Sgt. Albert De La Rosa wrote in his report that Gonzalez "was pacing, looking around with the gun still in his right hand. I again viewed the student by the door and was concerned that the subject (Gonzalez) was going to confront him, shoot him or take him hostage."

De La Rosa gave the order to "take him out" when Gonzalez turned toward the student. Cazares and officer Everardo Longoria each fired one shot.

Attorney Dale Kasofsky, who represents Gonzalez's parents, said Tuesday he had received little documentation of the incident and had not seen the custodial death report. Gonzalez's parents argued immediately after the shooting that lethal force was not necessary.

The Brownsville school district has requested an opinion from the state attorney general on whether it must provide The Associated Press with surveillance videos from the school that may show what happened.

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McALLEN, Texas -- A police sergeant gave the order to "take him out" and an armed teen was fatally shot after he turned toward another student in the hallway of a Texas middle school, according to a r...
McALLEN, Texas -- A police sergeant gave the order to "take him out" and an armed teen was fatally shot after he turned toward another student in the hallway of a Texas middle school, according to a r...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
trekie70
Lifelong bibliophile and political junkie
09:52 PM on 02/15/2012
While Gonzalez's death is no doubt a tragedy, the facts remain the same:

-he had what looked like a real gun
-he aimed it at police
-he acted in a threatening manner
-the safety of the remaining students and staff had to be considered

Hopefully this will be a lesson to all students about what can happen when you bring a firearm of any kind, real or fake, to school.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlairCase
10:53 AM on 02/15/2012
Pellet guns are not nearly as lethal as conventional guns, but they are real guns, and each year they cause dozens of deaths, some of which are homicides.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
krayoncolorz
10:22 AM on 02/15/2012
this is tough....but could the officers have shot him in the shoulder and leg areas? perhaps wounding him but not killing him? it's just tragic all around.
10:50 AM on 02/15/2012
In the movies, you see action heros shooting guns out of people's hands and just winging them. In real life this is hard to do. And if the suspect is not killed or very seriously wounded, they will almost always either return fire on the officers, shoot people within range or run away and start killing people.

Sad to say, but when gunmen point their gun at officers or innocent others: Then there is absolutely no choice except to shoot the oerson with the gun. And that is always deadly force. Police have to shoot to kill at that point.

And will manufacturers making toy guns, BB guns and pellet guns look exactly like real guns, police don't have the option or way to know what kind of gun the suspect actually has.

It is sad that this boy ended up dead. But he caused what happened. Even if his intention was to scare a few kids. Once the police arrived he needed to drop the gun, but instead he fired at them. And when you point a gun at police or others police will shoot you. And you must always drop your weapon when told to do so by police.
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krayoncolorz
04:45 PM on 02/15/2012
yeah, it's just very tragic. I think to myself if a 15 year old is shot in a non fatal way perhaps the shock of it would not allow what you describe. I just find the whole situation horribly sad.
08:28 AM on 02/15/2012
Mijo did nothing wrong. It is the cops' fault.
08:57 AM on 02/15/2012
When he was told to drop his weapon, repeatedly, and did not, that's not doing anything wrong? It's a tragedy to be sure, but he drops the weapons as ordered, and this probably has a different ending.
10:18 AM on 02/15/2012
Wait until his parents file an unlawful death suit with the department of justice. "They shot him because he was a Mexican".
11:42 AM on 02/23/2012
this boy was not the sharpest crayon in the box. he knew his gun was fake, did he think the cop's guns were fake, too??? I guess he found out too late. It is sad and misfortunate, but what was he doing with the gun in the first place?
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
01:24 AM on 02/15/2012
Not necessary?

And if it had been a real gun?

If he had shot the student in the hallway?

The police followed procedure. They had no reason to think this was not a real gun and acted accordingly. Gonzalez had plenty of opportunity to put the gun down and surrender.

It sounds like suicide by cop to me.
09:15 PM on 02/14/2012
I'm sure the officers involved have questioned if their was anything they could have done different, as this kid pointed what appeared to be a realistic gun at them what options did they really have! The story is tragic as I feel for the family, but the kid ignored the warnings which cost him his life!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
XV8 Crisis Suit
07:35 PM on 02/14/2012
I remember everyone crying fowl at the police officers, saying that they should have done something else. Now, after reading this report, they can eat their own words.
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jshop
Come together right now over them.
04:57 PM on 02/14/2012
Why do the police bother with reports like, "The report confirms officers' earlier statements that Gonzalez pointed the gun at them but also raises the possibility that he fired. The other student told investigators he believed Gonzalez had fired at police, and crime scene technicians recovered evidence that suggested Gonzalez fired at officers during an initial encounter near the school entrance." Using words like "possibility," "believed," and "suggested" just raises big, bright red flags. Either he fired on police, or he didn't! We know for sure that he DID NOT fire on himself!

I think it would be enough for the police chief to say something like, "Look, we had an armed person in a school house, and we will do everything in our power to make sure we don't have another Columbine in our community. We are sorry a child died, but that child had a gun just like the children who shot and killed so many at Columbine did before they killed themselves." I think most people would accept that and move on; instead, they come out with this oily explanation that sounds too much like too many other transparent law enforcement excuses for police brutality. So stupid!
04:20 PM on 02/14/2012
he was such a nice boy
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HisXLNC
No.
11:04 PM on 02/15/2012
Prisons and graveyards are filled with "nice boys".
04:11 PM on 02/14/2012
This is such a tragedy. It seems to me that the police tried several times to get him to drop the gun. I think they did what they had to do to save the other students' lives. If the tables were turned and Gonzalez had a student point a gun at him, maybe his parents would think that the police did the right thing to save their son's life. Unfortunately, that wasn't the case here. I feel bad for the family. My thoughts and prayers to them as they mourn their loss.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vic22
"I write to make it right, don't like what I see"
04:05 PM on 02/14/2012
Sounds like they did what they were supposed to do and gave him ample opportunity to disarm himself. May have been suicide by police
02:53 PM on 02/14/2012
Fool got what he had coming.
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hackerant
The truth is unpopular.
02:29 PM on 02/14/2012
No one had a tazer?
03:40 PM on 02/14/2012
My guess is they probably reserve tasers for only non life-threatening scenarios (like when the suspect *doesn't* have a gun)
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04:42 PM on 02/14/2012
The police responded proportionally to the perceived threat.
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freedom1947
San Juan River Fishin'
05:24 PM on 02/14/2012
John Wayne would have shot the gun out of his hand. Maybe even a sniper.
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eastfernstreet
Too micro to be seen . . .
02:26 PM on 02/14/2012
Too quick to judge, to be sure, but won't someone please invent a long-range taser or other non-lethal option.
11:05 AM on 02/15/2012
I understand your feelings. And I welcome your imput. But there is a limit to the extremes that we need to go to to protect the stupid criminal. A suspect that resists or tries to flee you can taser. But not a suspect with a weapon, be it a gun especially. Plus, a very young person, very old person, a person with a pacemaker, a person with a bad heart, a person with high blood pressure and with many types of illness face a very high risk of death if tasered. And a suspect should NEVER be tasered more than once or shocked more than once. The shock disrupts the nerveous system and a second shock and any additional shocks stand an extremely high risk of killing the suspect.