messages, the house select committee investigating the capitol insurrection wants by tomorrow. plus, after a wild week on wall street, earning are rolling in and this morning from some of the world s biggest companies such as goldman sachs and bank of america. cnbc s andrew ross sorkin is breaking down the latest number as we get them in. and we ll explain why democrats are very upset with joe manchin. it is groundhog day. it is getting old. and we ll play for you president biden s response to reporters when asked about his fist bump when saudi arabia s crown prince. we ll also talk about the actual visit to saudi arabia. but first, the damning new report about the police response to one of the deadliest school shootings. systemic failure is the way it was described in a new preliminary report written by the texas house of representatives, the report also details how nearly 400 law enforcement officials responded to the mass shooting and basically waited outside as the
the public is getting a chilling picture of early moments inside robb elementary from police body camera footage. am i bleeding? am i bleeding? reporter: early chaos and glimpses of calls to action. we ve got to get in there. we ve got to get in there. he s going to keep shooting. reporter: that plea coming minutes after the massacre began. but that first interaction, the only time the officers are seen in the video physically confronting the gunman for well over an hour. at one point, uvalde school district police chief pete arredondo, seen trying to reason with the shooter. you let me know if there s any kids in there or anything? this could be peaceful. reporter: arredondo, who s on administrative leave, maintains he was not the innocent commander that day. this new footage released as the most comprehensive report to date conducted by the texas house finds law enforcement, which ultimately reached 376 officers, didn t honor their most basic responsibility. the
most basic responsibility. the authors writing, they failed to prioritize saving the lives of victims over their own safety. several officers in the hallway or in that building knew or should have known there was dying in that classroom. and they should have done more, acted with urgency. reporter: family members were hoping for more than a verbal dressing down. but what they re saying we already knew it. they were powered. reporter: some action was taken right away. the city s mayor announcing right before this meeting that the acting chief of uvalde police department, mary owno pargas on leave. any offer who did learn about 911 phone calls coming in from rooms 111 and 112 including pargas was shifting to an active shooter response. there is windows into heroism. students being pulled out of the building and this heartbreaking