shimon, you ve obtained the report and read it. tell us what you ve learned. reporter: the lackadaisical response, they talk about how there was no command, no control, no leadership essentially on the scene of the shooting. it was just truly chaos, every officer doing their own thing. we re also learning what the police chief, the school police chief, pete arredondo, told the committee. he appeared before the committee. he explained his thinking. he said at one point he didn t believe there were any kids inside the score because it was awards day. what he said was he looked at an adjacent room, room 110, and when he went in there, there was no one in there, and it made himly were no babies as he said inside the room. of course, we know that was not the case. he also describes how initially his thinking was that this was an active shooter situation, but then what happens is he starts to believe that the subject, the gunman, is barricaded, and that in order to rescue the oth
i think there is an argument of criminal liability in this case. even if there isn t criminal liability, we ve talking administrative liability. i think every law enforcement agency that was there on the scene needs to go through their protocol and look at the actions of every one of their officers and if they violated the protocol, they need to be accounted for it administratively. i understand what you re saying. commissioner davis, when we hear in this report now spell out there were some 376 law enforcement responders from 20 different agencies, how do you assess the failures? i mean, clearly, multiple failures, everyone s in agreement with that. but how do you assess how everyone got it wrong among the 376 responders of all of these agencies in terms of not being more aggressive? not being more urgent?