UVALDE MASSACRE: Girl Who Told Shooter Bloodbath Would Be ‘Cool’ In Court

A 15-year-old German-American girl who texted with the Uvalde school shooter before he massacred 21 people has been found guilty of not reporting a planned crime.

Salvador Ramos, 18, fatally shot 19 children and two teachers at the Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, in the southern US state of Texas, on 24th May and wounded 17 others.

Salvador Ramos poses in undated photo. A 15-year-old from Germany found out about the planned mass murder in a chat with the killer and did not report it, she was warned for not reporting a planned crime when she was found guilty by the district court in Frankfurt, Germany, in October, 2022. (Newsflash)

Now a teenager he revealed his plans to minutes before the bloodbath has admitted in court that she did nothing to try to stop him.

Ramos had reportedly told her that he had just shot his grandmother in the head and was about to “shoot up an elementary school”.

The teenage girl just replied “cool” and did not alert the police, according to German media.

Picture shows the district court in Frankfurt, Germany, undated. A 15-year-old from Germany found out about the planned mass murder in a chat with the killer and did not report it, she was was found guilty and given a warning by the court, in October, 2022. (Newsflash)

It was only after she saw media reports about the shooting that she asked another pal in the US what had happened.

The unnamed teen appeared in court in a closed session wearing a dark hoodie pulled over her face as she walked into the Frankfurt District Court on 25th October.

Judges found the girl guilty and ordered her to attend a non-custodial re-education programme.

The sentence cannot be appealed, according to local media.

The Robb Elementary School massacre took place in the small Texas town of Uvalde and shocked the world.

The gunman was eventually shot dead by the police, but only after they waited 45 minutes in the school corridor for reinforcements.

Meanwhile, Ramos was in a classroom with terrified pupils and teachers.

The school district police chief, Pete Arredondo, was fired in August after the Uvalde school board voted unanimously to terminate his contract, and all district officers were placed on temporary leave in early October.

The police response and conduct during the shooting have been widely condemned.

The Texas Department of Public Safety said that before tactical units arrived, police officers inside the school, who numbered at least 19, made “no effort” to breach the room where Ramos was located.

Many of the investigations into the response to the shooting are still ongoing.

CNN reported on 24th October that Ryan Kindell, a member of the elite Texas Rangers unit, has been suspended and is being investigated for his alleged inaction during the shooting.