world, i am jim acosta, wolf blitzer is off, you are in the situation room. the fallout is just beginning after the stunning admission by police in texas that a wrong decision was made in response of the school s massacre. governor abbott saying he was misled. our correspondent has our report from uvalde, texas. i was misled. i tonight, greg abbott aiming his anger at law enforcement. my expectation is that the law enforcement leaders that are leading the investigations which includes the texas rangers and the fbi, they get to the bottom of every fact with absolute certainty. reporter: after damming new admissions from texas authorities surrounding the commander who made the decision not to immediately enter the classroom the gunman was in. the decision was made this was a barricaded subject. there was time to retrieve the key to wait for a tactical team to breach the door to take on the subject at that point. that was a wrong decision. reporter: officials exp
that s the sad part. reporter: the professor of new mexico state university wrote a studies on measure taken to prevent schools violence, training these officers is out right insufficient. school officers are simply tasked to cover too much ground. they have to be at the same place and exact time and to confront the shooter and mi minimize the damage. sh reporter: in one infamous case, a resource officer was accused of hiding from a shooter. par parkland, florida, scott peterson at douglas high school was widely criticized for staying outside for 45 minutes and not going inside to con
i do think change is coming. when congress failed to act, activists found a work around. [closing bell] wall street. in all honesty it probably is a work around because congress isn t getting much done. idea that wall street could enforce gun control took off. business is in this odd place where it has leverage. clearly the banks have leverage. the retail organizations have leverage. they parkland. people expect them to use that leverage. within days, companies acted. citi group proclaiming all retail clients would be prohibited from selling firearms to buyers under age 21 and pledging to cut off business with customers who sell bump stocks or high capacity magazines. bank of america was next announcing they would no longer offer loans to manufacturers that make assault rifles. the movement sparking controversy from some in congress like senator john kennedy of louisiana who argued big banks going rogue and creating their own gun control policy actually violates federal l
tammy: welcome back, everyone, to our inside the issues special edition of tucker carlson sent. the shooting in par parkland, florida has produced antigun action across the country. online retailers are getting involved as well and imposing their own form of gun control where the law doesn t even require it fox s hillary vaughn went to investigate this new trend. here s what she found. [cheers] this is washington, d.c., the day thousands of antigun protesters flood the capital streets chanting] students joining the march for our lives movement demanding new gun control law us after the mass shooting at stoneman douglas high school in parkland, florida. this is far too much. the fact that we have had all of these mass shootings and that we haven t done anything about it. i just would like to see this government do something.
something. i do think change is coming. when congress failed to act, activists found a work around. [closing bell] wall street. in all honesty it probably is a work around because congress isn t getting much done. idea that wall street could enforce gun control took off. business is in this odd place where it has leverage. clearly the banks have leverage. the retail organizations have leverage. they parkland. people expect them to use that leverage. within days, companies acted. citi group proclaiming all retail clients would be prohibited from selling firearms to buyers under age 21 and pledging to cut off business with customers who sell bump stocks or high capacity magazines. bank of america was next announcing they would no longer offer loans to manufacturers that make assault rifles. the movement sparking controversy from some in congress like senator john kennedy of louisiana who argued big banks going rogue and creating their own gun control policy actually violate