10-count indictment released for former Uvalde school district police chief charged with abandoning/endangering child

Pete Arredondo charged with abandoning/endangering child, a state jail felony

Records from a 10-count indictment were released Friday in the case against former Uvalde school district police chief Pete Arredondo.

Arredondo has been charged with abandoning/endangering a child, which is a state jail felony, Uvalde County District Clerk records show.

According to our sister station KSAT, each of the 10 counts is for children who survived the deadly attack at Robb Elementary School on May 24, 2022.

Nineteen students and two teachers were killed after a gunman entered the school and then the classrooms.

The indictment lists Arredondo as the incident commander of an incident involving an active shooter on a school campus that was under his control.

More specifically, under each count, the charge said that Arredondo, by act and omission intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, and with criminal negligence, placed a child younger than 15 years of age in imminent danger of bodily injury, death, physical impairment, and mental impairment.

Some of the failures listed are failing to identify the incident as an active shooter incident, delaying response by law enforcement officers to an active shooter situation, failing to enforce an active shooter response plan developed by Uvalde Consolidated ISD, deciding to negotiate while the gunman was engaged in an active shooter incident and failing to timely provide keys and breaching tools to enter classrooms 111 and 112.

Arredondo turned himself in on Thursday and posted the $10,000 bond, officials confirmed to KSAT.

The charges come more than five months after a grand jury in Uvalde County was first impaneled to review the case for possible criminal charges.

Arredondo was fired months after the massacre.

Sources told KSAT that a second former UCISD police officer, Adrian Gonzales, was also indicted Thursday.

Indictment paperwork for Gonzales was still not available as of Friday morning, a likely indication that he had yet to turn himself in to be formally booked and charged.

Uvalde County’s District Attorney has yet to respond to multiple requests from KSAT seeking comment about the indictments.

State Sen. Roland Gutierrez, who represents Uvalde, issued the following statement:

“What happened in Uvalde two years ago was unthinkable. Nearly 400 officers failed to confront a teenager with an AR-15 for 77 agonizing minutes, while children and teachers endured terror while officers armed to the teeth huddled in hallways and outside the building.

“The gross incompetence of the Texas Department of Public Safety and their cowardice will forever be a stain on this tragedy. The top law enforcement agency in the State of Texas must answer for grave errors in judgment and for lying every single day to the public about how the massacre unfolded.

“From falsely blaming a teacher for propping open a door to pinning the entire catastrophe on one ignorant officer, the Texas Department of Public Safety has done nothing in Uvalde but cover up for their abject failure.

“We must get to the core of the cover-up and have the truth, so that this never happens again. Every single officer that stood down that day must be held accountable, from Pete Arredondo all the way up to Steve McCraw. We can’t rest until we have justice.”


About the Authors

Erica Hernandez is an Emmy award-winning journalist with 15 years of experience in the broadcast news business. Erica has covered a wide array of stories all over Central and South Texas. She's currently the court reporter and cohost of the podcast Texas Crime Stories.

Daniela Ibarra joined the KSAT News team in July 2023. This isn’t her first time in the KSAT newsroom– the San Antonio native spent the summer of 2017 as an intern. Daniela is a proud Mean Green alum, earning her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of North Texas.

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