and as you could imagine, a mix of emotions here in this community today. with robb elementary being torn down, the students who went there are now splitting up against several area schools. that will look far different than they did just a few months ago. everyone here tells me that they re on their own timeline when it comes to grief. but they are hopeful that this first day back to class will bring about some real healing. for many in uvalde, summer break was a blur. now this tight knit town is asking how to go back to school. priority number one, helping their 10-year-old daughter who was at the school that day. i want to shelter her but i don t want her to live in fear. so they enrolled her in a private school in uvalde, which they say made immediate safety upgrades for everyone s peace of mind. when you walk into your new school, do you feel safer? yeah. reporter: uvalde public schools promising extra law enforcement will be on hand. along with counselors and
credit card receipts. that is the fir thing they do. and you see body armor, guns over here, body piercing bullets over here. and you see and by the way, all bought typically within two or three weeks of each other. so it is looking more for the trends in the same way that if you use your credit card at a restaurant or gas station, they ll call up and say is this really a purchase. that is what this is going to be about. it is about somebody occasionally making that call and hopefully that call can save lives. andrew, i m surprised this doesn t already fall on the auspices of the patriot act. how did this not be included when we re looking at fertilizer, we re looking at other patterns of behavior, it seems like guns and arms and body armor and weapons of war would be something to be categorized. for whatever reason, they have been protected, i want to say avoided in this context.