for 77 minutes, bleeding from multiple gunshot wounds. reyes had to listen as the gunman went on to kill 19 children and 2 teachers in that elementary school. reyes said at one point, he heard a student in the connecting classroom call out for police to help. but the police had retreated. and he is outraged over the lack of action by police. he says it s unforgivable. just bullets everywhere and then i just remember border patrol saying, get up, get up, and i couldn t get up. did you feel abandoned in that moment by police, by the people who were supposed to protect you? absolutely. after everything, i get more angry because you have a bulletproof vest. i had nothing. i had nothing. you re supposed to protect and serve. there is no excuse. for their actions, and i will never forgive them. i lost 11 that day, and i went to my parents and said, i m sorry. i tried my best. with what i was taught to do. please don t be angry with me. can you imagine what that man lives
could spark violence this summer and into the midterm elections. cnn s law enforcement correspondent whitney wild is covering all this for us. so, whitney, tell us more about the warning. reporter: this bulletin threads together these recent attacks, buffalo, uvalde, the new york subway shooting, the shooting at a church in california among others, and assesses that we are still in dangerous territory here. the other reality, this report makes clear, is that the environment we were in leading up to january 6th, 2021, hasn t changed that much. the new advisory assesses that some of the risks still centers quite a bit on elections. the bulletin notes that misinformation, disinformation, spitting up on social media remains incredibly dangerous. here s a quote from that bulletin. as the united states enters midterm election season this year, we assess that calls for violence by domestic violent extremists directed at democratic institutions, political candidates, party offices, election