land spanning arizona, new mexico and utah. we agreed not to search him because his work involves searching for criminals. it will be a family on family crime and they may not want the individual to go to jail. reporter: one challenge working here, you are limited in what evidence might be available? oh, absolutely. there will not be a neighbor with a doorbell camera. reporter: the bureau and tribal police acknowledge the database was long overdue. prior to the fbi s new database law enforcement didn t have a firm grasp of the number of people actually missing. native americans, they re embedded in our very fabric of who we are as a society. we ve consolidated everything. it s not that the work wasn t being done but was being done in different ways.
death of anton black. i will give you three basic choices here. accident, homicide, murder. this medical examiner chose accident. how did he come up with accident? i am not quite sure how they came up with accident. i think that there is a philosophy and culture if there is an altercation with law enforcement that often if law enforcement didn t mean to kill someone, then it s an accident. but i suggest that it s a homicide, that whether they intended to kill him or not, the actions of another human, whether they are law enforcement or not, those actions that lead to a death are homicide. that s the technical definition of homicide? a death by the hands of another. we don t get into intent. that s right. to answer your question about murder, murder is a legal construct, and that can be determined by your prosecutor, your jury. if you were the medical examiner you would have labeled this homicide? simply. and so what does that
and that lieutenant was also trying to argue that these officers were, you know, taking gunfire, and they had to protect themselves. so they didn t exactly know what they were dealing with. and so they needed more firepower and they needed more help. and so that s why it took so long. but, again, trying to give us this kind of glowing picture of the initial response that police did everything right here, that they were the heroes. many parents who stood outside robb elementary urging law enforcement to do more if they got a shot, shoot them or something. don t see the police who waited in the hallway for more than 70 minutes as heroes. they re all in there. the cops ain t doing [ bleep ] except standing outside. javier was outside the school, desperately worried about his 9-year-old daughter jacqueline. you argued with authorities outside, saying they should go in. you said that law enforcement didn t do their jobs. they should have gone in faster. do you still believe that
has been ripped off repeatedly. the families say they have been left in the dark when it comes to the investigation. the mayor of this community has gone so far as to say that there was a cover-up happening at the state level because texas dps has been very critical and right out of the gate seemed to place the majority of the blame if not all the blame on the chief of the uvalde school district s police pete arredondo. however this report that was released today is mighty interesting because it spreads blame across all of the agencies here. it is fascinating to learn that the bulk of the first responders here were as at the federal level and even had more training when it came to active shooter scenarios than the local police here did. that is the question why as anyone a member of law enforcement didn t just step out
it with his hands or a baseball bat. your response to that description? 26 kids in china, the day of the sandy hook shooting, 26 kids in china were slashed, they all survived, happened about nine hours before sandy hook. 26 children died in sandy hook, the same day. so that s my response to the whole baseball bat argument. at the end of the day, people, guns do kill people. we got a proliferation of guns with 18-year-olds that just shouldn t be they shouldn t have assault rifles. but we re forgetting and we re forgetting these families and what they want. what they want is answers. they want answers as to why law enforcement didn t do their job that day. indeed you had arredondo make his errors, but every law enforcement agency in that space made errors. steve mccraw suggested himself that the active shooter protocol supersedes incident commander protocol. i asked him that question, he answered affirmatively.