Why Texas lawmakers are looking to end the 'dead suspect loophole'
Published: Sat, 04/15/23
Why Texas lawmakers are looking to end the 'dead suspect loophole'
A lawmaker says law enforcement agencies should be required to release details when a suspect dies in their custody.
John C. MoritzCorpus Christi Caller Times
AUSTIN — A gap in the state's open government laws allowed family members of last year's mass shooting victims in Uvalde to be kept in the dark about how law enforcement reacted in real time. That gap could finally be closed under legislation heard Wednesday by a legislative panel.
The measure, House Bill 30 by El Paso Democrat Joe Moody, would close what has been called "the dead suspect loophole" that has been used by law enforcement agencies to block the release of police records until a suspect has been convicted. However, when a suspect dies before trial either at the hand of law enforcement or while in custody, there is no possibility of conviction.
The shooter who gunned down 19 children and two teachers in Uvalde's Robb Elementary School on May 24, 2022, was killed by a team from the U.S. Border Patrol. But because of the loophole, Uvalde families have not been able to obtain a clear picture on why the state and local law enforcement officers on the scene had allowed 77 minutes to pass before the gunman was shot dead.
Much of what is known has come not from law enforcement, but from the special House committee formed by Speaker Dade Phelan to examine the shooting.
Kathy and Robert Dyer, whose 18-year-old son, Graham, died while in police custody in 2013, speak with Kelley Shannon (center), Executive Director of the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas, in the Texas Capitol. Tamir Kalifa/Austin American-Statesma
“Uvalde underscores how crucial this is," Moody, who was a member of the special panel, told the House State Affairs Committee. "The video you’ve all seen of that incident is only out there because (state Rep. Dustin Burrows, the special committee chairman) took the courageous step of announcing that he intended to release the video ... to get the truth out.
"If he hadn’t, it would still be secret today — even for the families whose children never came home that day.”
A family's frustration with dead suspect loophole
Since even before the Uvalde mass shooting, Moody has tried without success to close the loophole. And working with him for the past several years have been Robert and Kathy Dyer. In 2013, their 18-year-old son, Graham, died after being taken to jail by police in the Dallas suburb of Mesquite.