My dad was an instructor for active shooter situations, most PD policy is you go in immediately, alone or otherwise. Identify, clear, and inform arriving units
My jaw hit the floor when you said the shooter used to be a professor at the college I went to. I looked into it and he left a year before I got there, but he taught in the exact department i was majoring in
@AsliceOFtea413 At first I was like "why tf does he love the active shooter" but then realized that was like when someone comes in and someone says "customer" and puts down the phone.
@@thepollylama6413 I can see what u mean and sort of, but I don't think he was on a call. probably just leaving a voice message incase things don't turn out as planned
@@wereallscrewed9714 I mean, he didn’t say something like “I wanna end this dude” he just said “this is what I signed up for” he signed up to protect people, the people at that university, doesn’t matter if he loses his life because that’s what he signed up for the police for.
@abcpea he responded with "this is what I signed up for" after they heard about shot victims. I believe he's bracing himself for the scene of dead bodies.
@@notanindianscammer7594 incorrect. The active shooter doctrine states that police enter the building and try to end the threat, regardless of the quantity or quality of the information given.
"Are you ready for this?" "This is what I signed up for." is a refreshing response considering what some PD's have done lately in response to shootings.
@@ryancumbie8148 refreshing? Its the norm. Watch any of the many bodycams responding to active shooters. They all do their jobs. Hyperfixating on the singular instance of bad response that happened over a year ago discredits the norm
@@chef_hood idc about the main people. I care about 400 officers and not a single one of them going in. Instead actively stop parents trying to go in. All 400+ should be charged
Since COLUMBINE the standing SOP has been to run towards the gunfire, even IF YOU ARE ALONE. Uvalde pictures were recently released, and it will make you vomit knowing the police were literally feet away as the shooter wrote "LOL" in children's blood on the white dry erase board.
I agree and the part where one of the police officers was like fucking cowards locked in I'm like okay they're untrained they don't have a weapon what the fuck you think they're supposed to do that pissed me off
The first officers just running in with only a 9mm handgun is amazing. They don't even know what the gun the shooter is using, and they don't know if they have body armour.
The creepiest moment is when the camera pans to the trench coat man and the officers usher him out. Shows just how foggy things can be in these situations.
i was just thinking this i had to slow it down and rewind bc i couldn’t believe it but in such chaos like this i don’t blame them. i only noticed him because the beginning of the video mentioned the coat
Prejudice of officers thinking they are looking for a young kid in combat gear lol. They shouldn't be letting people leave at all but in the rush of the situation they are just yelling at everyone not openly holding a gun to leave. A guy in a long coat standing around with nobody else around him should have been more suspicious but he's an older white male so they just assume he's not the killer lol.
@@lobbykb Honestly, I didn´t even notice myself and was shocked when they eventually pointed out that exact moment once again. My utmost respect for all of those police officers.
@@leyleyza I also felt the person on the other end having to hear it. 💔 That was probably the longest day of their life, waiting to hear back from them.
Oh my god get over it already, im not defending what happened but it is getting tiresome that everyone keeps regurgitating the same comment a whole year later on unrelated videos
Out of all the police reactions, I feel like the most haunting is the one who simply said "Active shooter, love you" I presume to his family member before hanging up the call. There is no time for deep emotions, only reactions.
@@DXTRIPLEHBKyeah, when totaled my car i couldn’t feel a single broken bone or injury. i climbed out of the car myself and walked to the nearest house. then walked myself to the ambulance when they came
I have always said these people aren't smart at all. They wouldn't forfeit their life if they were smart, self preservation is a sign of intelligence. 😂
Thank you @@F90-s7q I was getting ready to be extremely upset. A grand majority of people who do susu even attempt it are people like lawyers and foremen and IT, you know, the people who are commonly known for lacking intelligence before choosing to end themselves, right spicy? Imagine thinking emotions and logic work on the same process stream. Or that being intelligent means you have a great life? Most people who are intelligent are so because of a terrible life.
@@alekhinesgun9997 to me seeme like an extremely immature attitude towards an extremely serious situation. These are the guys in war movies that shit their pants and die in the opening act for a reason. I much prefer the cop who simply told his wife "love you" and then got focused on the task at hand.
@@9jvfnvolkerts693cops are looking for "action". "Action", however, isn't a good thing, it means something awful is happening. No composure, emotionally excited by violence.
I'm a combat veteran. Those cops have some cojones.......That situation is only complicated with the addition of scared young people. That "I want to go home" absolutely breaks my heart. Poor young lady, I hope she's okay
That one loud ass droning alarm is actually just a hindrance. It hinders communication and virtually disables people's ability to hear what's going on in another room
Man, this has GOT to be so confusing for them all. You have to worry about civilians, two different departments of cops, AND the FBI on top of that. It's got to be terrifying, praying you don't shoot a friendly.
I work for Metro. Comms had to tell us to stop assigning ourselves to the call, and to completely stop monitoring, because we completely overloaded the CAD system and updates in the call details were getting slowed down. Just about every single cop in Las Vegas showed up, Metro SWAT, Henderson PD, Henderson SWAT, North Las Vegas PD, NLV SWAT, FBI SWAT, ATF, traffic units, school police, detectives were coming in and breaking into the key rooms to get plain cars, there was even a DMV police officer who showed up (I didn't even know DMV had cops until this happened). Command had to start sending units back to the areas they came from to handle calls for service because everyone was trying to come help. Guys literally smashing through walls to try and help kids. I've never seen anything like it in my life.
@@U_niqueySee: 2020 BLM/ANTIFA nationwide riots. Cops ordered to do nothing and stand down, and they followed those orders. Civilians had to step up to do the cops jobs the best they could, for free.
@@ominous27 We all think the same way. It's a double-edged sword and we call it over-saturation. We always joke that if someone did this kind of thing at police headquarters, more of us would get hurt trampling each other to go get the bad guy than in the actual crime.
I would assume that the students age group is more relaxed and laid back. If you turned off the alarm, many students would just go back to class or doing whatever they were doing. They will assume a false alarm, or that the problem was fixed, leaving them vulnerable to the shooter.
In this short 25 minutes video we witnessed so many heroes risking everything to save lives in the face of evil, it was truly incredible. “Courage is not the absence of fear, it’s acting in spite of fear”
@@LNekko right? It was deafening. You wouldn’t be able to hear wear the shots were coming from or someone trying to get your attention to warn you. It sounded like a fire trucks horn stuck on.
I think it's that loud to make sure the shooter can't hear if students and staff are in rooms it may be meant to disorient the shooter. Tho it makes it hard for the officers to communicate and give commands.
We had a similar alarm to that in my high school it was a fire alarm / active shooter alarm. Yeah it served both purposes figure that one out. Let's have an alarm that freaks out and disorients all the students at the same time while there's a potential danger.... Like I know there needs to be some sort of alarm but..... How about it not be so loud and obnoxious that it legitimately disorients the people that need to be calm....
Our best friends’ son was supposed to be in UNLV classes that afternoon so we called for hours! He decided to skip class & go into work early. We were so relieved & upset with him all at the same time. God bless & be with all of the families.😢
I can understand why you felt that way. You were upset that he skipped class, but you were relieved he wasn't on campus that day. You and your friend must have been on an emotional rollercoaster that day. Angry, but relieved.
@@bunk9261 you’re right but he’s a pharmacist making bank at work. He’s just finishing up a few last classes he doesn’t even really need. I didn’t believe it at first either!🤔
@@Sh3r-Bear if he's an adult and successful I believe he has the right to skip a class or two, but I can gaurantee you he didnt skip class just to go to work early lol 😂
It's horrible to see a professor instead of a student causing this chaos. Imagine watching from outside a classroom a man is walking up to the police, thinking a teacher has made it out alive, only for the guy to open fire.
Nobody should be causing any type of shooting, neither old nor young, in any case saying instead of a student process that you expect that, nobody deserves this kind of traumatic experience.
I was visiting Vegas when this happened... Id accidentally left my seizure medication behind at home and ended up having seizures that sent me to the ICU for 3 days. The shooting happened on the 2nd day. I was still coming to but i remember being wheeled out into the hallway still in my bed to make room for inbound victims. It was absolute insanity
The fact the active shooter was showed walking like he wasn’t the shooter is so crazy to me. the cops literally told him to get out 😭 omgggg prayers to the lost loved ones 😢
Then opened up on the cops outside anyways. Since they didn't stop him he could have just walked away but he didn't, that means he didn't plan to make it out.
@@Gortosan It's not an excuse but, it's not an excuse to overlook that mental health issues and bullying in school settings are obviously breeding people who think this is justified.
As a dispatcher, I'm proud of the dispatchers in this one. The officer telling his family he loves them kills me. The one unit saying, this is it, this is what I signed up for is powerful too
@@trovman999a lot…? This is such a dumb question. If you have to ask it, in a RUclips comment section. Please for the safety of all of us. Please do not become one.
@@RyanSalm if you don’t like my comment, than leave this comment section. you had nothing to do with this in the first place. it was a simple question. if you think it’s dumb, keep that opinion to yourself because you don’t affect me nor offend me.
Those are the stupidest alarms I have ever heard in my life, it doesn't alert anyone, but rather terrifies all both in and around the building spreading nothing but chaos.
I live all the way in Australia, every time i watch scenarios like this it makes me feel sick, its quite sad to developed the understanding that just any person in the US could just make up their mind one random day and change an unpredictable amount of peoples lives, i know there isn't a thing people can do right now and the hole has already ben dug so deep but may there be i power out there that can protect you, your family and anyone who ever has to experience anything like this. I hope for the best for everyone
not just any person, you have to go through extensive testing to aquire a firearm, unfortunately many people make them illegally or someone completely sane just snaps
You do realize it happens in Australia too, right? And Canada, and UK, and all these other ‘paradise’ countries. It can happen anywhere. Always be vigilant and don’t underestimate people in a public place. May goodness follow your life and family as well.
@@queueuof If you are talking about the US as a whole, that's not even close to true. You pretty much just need to have a pulse, no felonies, and be 18 and get a firearm in most locations.
I just clicked on the video but stopped 4 seconds in because I know exactly what this is and I was there. This was one of the most shocking and horrifying days of my life. It was a Wednesday, the week before final exams. I had just gotten coffee right in the student union building at UNLV, 150 yards from the beam building, and was ready to start a big study session when I heard shots go off. I asked myself “were those gunshots?” Only to see people suddenly running hysterically in one direction and officers running in another direction. This was a long, hard day that will never be forgotten. The wounds are still fresh honestly. I don’t know if I will be able to finish this because this is my first time seeing any video on this so we will see… Edit: it was hard to watch but just want to say how immensely grateful I am for our officer response. Every jurisdiction in the county ended up showing up. Many off-duty officers reported to help. I can’t express enough how thankful I am for the people who saved my life and kept me safe that day. It could have been so different if I was just a minute or two quicker. 10/1 despite how awful that day was, proved to help our police be ready to respond to this. I hope for a future where this isnt a norm for future generations. I’ve experienced this twice now.
As a Vegas person this hits so close to home for so many reasons. My sister was on campus that day and I woke up that morning to her text in the family group chat just in case something went wrong. She was on call with our parents so that she could feel not so alone while hiding and to tell them more than just what her message could say. We were lucky and thankful she was in another building and one of my coworkers who was also a student there called out of work cause they were in about to walk into the building when the shots rang out and fled as fast as he could to his car. It was truly a terrifying day and it took everything from my mom and sister to stop my dad from jumping into the car that morning. He was a retired cop from the campus security that left the force two years prior. So it was especially hard on him for not just his daughter was there, but all his old coworkers too. I’m really glad I didn’t have to seen him rush into action like that again since October 1st. He was apart of the Safety Retreats for the injured and in need. Him running out in the middle of the night was so much more terrifying than any other close call I’d ever known of him when all my family and me could do was watch the news in horror knowing he was out there. Same for my uncle as he was part of the roaming police on the streets that night during that shooting and was on the grounds of the concert trying to find people still hiding in the fixtures and around the event space. He needed a lot of therapy after because my fiancé and I were meant to be there with a group of friends that night as we actively go to festivals and raves. When he found one of our high school friends that rushed to his aide upon recognizing him he just didn’t register that we’d decided not to go weeks before cause it wasn’t our scene. He was convinced mentally that we were there after finding our friend and her group. Every body became a haunting experience of paranoia for him and the nightmares still linger now that he’s moved away to another state and a different profession. Growing up in a cop family you learn to be desensitized with the fact your dad or uncle might be gone one day. But as much as I thought I’d be ok because of growing up my whole life knowing that fact it still makes me shudder to imagine what I felt that night just watching the news as close as possible with mom and trying to find my dad and uncle in the crowds. Refreshing snap chat and social medias between all our phones to try and see them alive and safe in the backgrounds of other people’s videos. It was silent in terms of knowing what happened to them in the moment and also so loud in terms of fear and knowledge of what else was happening to all those I knew still down there. And for my sister that day. I’m so thankful every time I see her talking with my fiancé or roommates in the living room that she is still here and alive.
Your dad sounds like a hero to me, he was going to get his daughter and coworkers out of there even if he had to sacrifice his life. What a great man. Luckily he didn’t have to, and I’m sorry to hear his trauma from the Vegas shooting prior, I hope he finds peace that he did gods work helping people and he’s extremely appreciated from everyone, even from afar! Your dad sounds like an amazing man! Prayers to him and your family
@@xXxFroztyy Thank you very kindly for your prayers and appreciation. I think the world of my family and thankfully both my dad and uncle are out of the danger in different retirement jobs now. My dad builds and sells vintage toys at a shop in town with my brother since my brother is on the spectrum and can’t go to a job without guidance, so both of them have a lot of fun talking to like minded people who love the old 70s/80s/90s toys and it gets my brother socialized which is always good too to expand his little world. My uncle bested his cancer last year after fighting it throughout all of Covid which ultimately was the reason he retired early from the force soon after Oct. 1st. He works as a financial advisor and sponsor for his son’s brand new business in Idaho which handles the smaller cases police in the area can’t handle due to shortages in staff such as rescue operations, missing person searches, well fair checks, and tons of other small cases that they get handed by the authorities. So still in the line of work but with more of a desk job now whereas his son has taken on the mantle and headed off to help people in his stead. I’m blessed that they are both still in my life and were some of the good ones on the streets that people respected and never had anything negative to say about them. And I’m blessed that other people get to know a little snippet of the men my family holds near and dear in our hearts.
Applauding for the officers in this one, not much hesitation compared to other cases. The officer who said "this is what I signed up for" gave me chills, imagine that being your first response knowing your going head first into a situation you could very easily not walk out of. Makes me emotional. Dont shit on cops unless they are individually bad please. So many give their lives to help people who dont even value them.
@@Nobody-iq5bi He's referring to the shootings in Uvalde, Texas, where the Uvalde police just stood around and waited for 74 minutes while a gunman was killing students in a school. It was not until another law enforcement agency from a different town dozens of miles away showed up that something was done. Basically, the other agency (can't remember which one) entered the room the shooter was in and killed him within minutes of arriving.
Thats just uvalde …. Every other texas police doesn’t even play like that… and would’ve saved those kids and others… there was a school shooting last year … shooter thought it was sweet and fcked around and found out .
Uvalde was the most worst handled shooting. I watched that video of the 911 calls long story short getting told by a toddler "The shooter is in here and has shot alot of us" And they didn't enter.
i was on campus this day just got to school walking to class it truly was as chaotic as this video shows i ran to my friends dorm and sat there watching cops clear the entire campus and they cancelled classes for the semester but going back just this past spring and even getting ready to go back for the fall semester it’s still a heavy feeling
That 1st caller sickened me. She was only concerned for herself or she wouldn't have been taking so fking long to tell the operator. She just kept talking all SLOW with the little cutesy mouse voice..She should have been hollaring, "Help! People are being shot!" No, instead she's all, "sniffle sniffle..my door is...............locked.............It's happening right now". Gross
Except when they pepper in the nonsense body language analysis. They do consistently cover the most insane situations that I would have never otherwise heard of though.
@@Woolf729 so you think just because they are all hispanic that the Uvalde police are worse than the Vegas police??? Do you even think about what you say? Not to mention that the literal worst mass shooting happened in Vegas with this same police force. 60 people dead, 413 wounded, compared to little old Uvalde which was only like 17ish. You have to be crazy saying the things you say.
"Some of these officers will be experiencing something new." Officer: "Yeah, sorry. This is day one for me." Talk about one heck of a first day on the job. xD
When the cop left his loved one the “Active shooter love you” message, that sent chills through my body! Blessings to everyone who protects us everyday.🙏🏽
The absolute bravery of every man and woman who ran into the situation is unbelievable. They all have family and friends who love them but put everything on the line to save as many people as they could. I'm not sure I would be able to do that job
The alarm is to confuse and disorient the shooter. Police train massively for this. When they train, they are actual buildings they run into and one of the main things they do is have a really loud alarm sounding. This means, the police are very comfortable and highly trained to not become disoriented by the noise while the shooter's head is throbbing with a cacophony loud noises.
That university cop charging in to the unknown solo has some serious stones. A lot of people say they would do one thing or the other but no one really knows what they'd do until it happens. Actions like that differentiate between types of people in a massive way
The fact there’s people out there that say cops don’t do anything for them, but yet they’re the ones rushing into school to protect our kids and it even showed a split second where the cops sent a message to his loved one saying active shooter. Love you.
As a dispatcher this level of swearing is so justified for the situation. We were probably at the centre a thousand miles a minute too. It is so much involved. Love seeing them on scene ❤such superhero’s. We do everything we can to protect you in the background
@@FATMAC2 I think really trying to verify information in these moments. The amount of info probably gathered in the first 30 minutes alone could give you a scroll. Really gotta decipher important info, changed info, update units the info. Like a good game of broken telephone. As you can see even the degree of confusion and stress that arises in the officers, us just painting a picture and making sure it’s damn well right back at the centre so we can provide what they need without them asking for it. Although I think there was multiple dispatchers throughout this probably. We all sound the same sometimes Lol it’s that dispatcher voice. Glad she kept that mom on the phone and validated her concern. And thank you, we’re part of a puzzle behind the scenes for sure ❤️
Additionally; that "second suspect" was some crazy homeless black male who ran away from campus yelling that he was the shooter, and then he barricaded himself in the Best Western across the intersection. SWAT broke a team off to go get him and got him into custody.
Unfortunately this isn’t super rare for the US… I’ve been through it in high school. Shivering and holding your breath in a dark corner waiting for any help to save you is never an experience I would wish on anyone. I’m so thankful for these officers. Thanks for saving my life and countless others too.
The first Campus Officer also too should be recognized for his Bravery. The entire response was impressive. I think it was probably hard to recognize the shooter because he had a hand gun, not an assault rifle. He may have been putting it in his coat pocket as he made his way through halls & different buildings. So scary.
My stepson had class that day, but luckily he hadn't left yet. That initial panic of first hearing about it was indescribable. My brain immediately went to the worst, but again luckily he wasn't there yet.
much much older fire alarm system. i agree 100% that these should be changed or at least updated. not bad. just old and possibly full of issues in the system.
When they brainwash these people to do this they give them code sounds to stop and start. Just like the old movies where the bad guy gets a single phone call, drops the phone and his whole phony life and goes and does their deeds. They also have signal sounds to stop the shooter which are the bagpipe sounds. Notice when it starts the shooting stops.
They are older devices from the 70s and 80s made by federal signal and Wheelock, they use a mechanical mechanism to make the horn sound heard, they are extremely loud and will get your attention. They didn't help in this situation because it made it hard for the officers to hear each other, and it was intimidating sounding but it's an alarm that's supposed to be loud. It's sad to see a situation like this happen...
As a gun owner I don’t understand how people can do this it’s sickening and then it comes back on us lawful gun owners but it is just sickening that this happened and so many innocent people were killed😢
OMG EWU with consecutive uploads, it's a great thing to see. You're team has been working hard lately over all your channels and I couldn't be any more happy❤❤
i think he thought they were going to drive him all the way to the hospital, not just to an ambulance. and he was probably also concerned abt their lack of concealment from the shooter while having it open
78 seconds is actually a fast response time, and the fact he went in solo is just crazy
Adrenaline, man.
@@cischsr2794 Adrenaline, sure, but the vast majority of people would never do that. We might like to tell ourselves otherwise, but most would not.
My dad was an instructor for active shooter situations, most PD policy is you go in immediately, alone or otherwise. Identify, clear, and inform arriving units
In AZ we’re expected to go in solo. There’s state law that says so.
@@cischsr2794 More than just adrenaline, that's a conscience decision and I'm pretty sure that was the guy whose wife was in there.
That one university cop has more balls than all the cops at uvalde
Except that one officer that got his gun taken away
Just said the same thing!
@@themetalchica yep his username says he is a not good person
No…. If they don’t follow protocol they can get fired or be charged.
@@thebrickboss8003 no, I was agreeing with the OP.
Props to the first campus officer running in solo. That’s so scary.
It absolutely is scary, @amaiaford9139! Our Heavenly Father and St. Michael The Archangel were definitely watching over this warrior!
Braver than Officer Scott Peterson the Coward of Broward and those cops in Uvalde.
Big dawg energy
@@amaiaford9139 but was he even armed with a gun
@@cruisinguy6024 cmon buddy just turn off your brain and don't think about it like the rest of us!
My jaw hit the floor when you said the shooter used to be a professor at the college I went to.
I looked into it and he left a year before I got there, but he taught in the exact department i was majoring in
stay safe.
@@Kyle_919 wild
Bad kitty no vaping
@@KrisMoreno-uk9to bro what
@@Mason-o9blook at op’s pfp
"Active shooter, love you."
That is a man that knows what could have happened to him.
@AsliceOFtea413 At first I was like "why tf does he love the active shooter" but then realized that was like when someone comes in and someone says "customer" and puts down the phone.
@@thepollylama6413 I can see what u mean and sort of, but I don't think he was on a call. probably just leaving a voice message incase things don't turn out as planned
My heart sank....ugh
Its pretty heavy stuff
When was this even said? Tf 🤣
“This is what I signed up for” gave me chills. That’s someone who is down to save lives and stop a threat.
Or someone with macho fantasies
@@abcpea or a former military serviceman who has skills to use and found a job where his skills will be useful when the world turns to sh!t.
@@cavman7 or a trigger happy hothead waiting to unload the clip, cops pray to AVOID a situation like this not crave it
@@wereallscrewed9714 I mean, he didn’t say something like “I wanna end this dude” he just said “this is what I signed up for” he signed up to protect people, the people at that university, doesn’t matter if he loses his life because that’s what he signed up for the police for.
@abcpea he responded with "this is what I signed up for" after they heard about shot victims. I believe he's bracing himself for the scene of dead bodies.
“We’re not standing by” damn right
They should have followed orders and stand by, they are just making the situation more dangerous
@@notanindianscammer7594 incorrect. The active shooter doctrine states that police enter the building and try to end the threat, regardless of the quantity or quality of the information given.
@cooperraffety3660 "I just got here!" -let her get some instructions first.
finally, cops who understand the gravity and urgency of the situation instead of just standing around
@@notanindianscammer7594 that will only allow the shooter to kill more people
"Are you ready for this?" "This is what I signed up for." is a refreshing response considering what some PD's have done lately in response to shootings.
Actually it’s sad that this is where the USA is at, when “someone signs up for” mass murder as though it’s so common. ❤
@@ryancumbie8148 refreshing? Its the norm. Watch any of the many bodycams responding to active shooters. They all do their jobs.
Hyperfixating on the singular instance of bad response that happened over a year ago discredits the norm
Abbbsooolutely what I was thinking!
@@ryancumbie8148 what have they done?
@@luf832 Uvalde.
the university security guard who was there in 78 seconds needs a raise
to make up for the years hes risking to lose
@@laurenhowell3194 he was on campus smh lol
@@Johnjohn-dt6hwand yet he ran in to the building completely alone knowing he was one of the first to hear those bullets shot
Hes a cop, not security. State unis have their own police force
He’s not a security guard. He’s a fully-sworn state police officer employed by the university.
See the only cop on campus at the time rushed straight in in only 1 minute by himself looking for that scumbag. Uvalde dropped the ball
& STILL have jobs!
@@jeanettecoleman-mz7ie 2 just got charged and are going to prison, the main people will be charged just watch
@@chef_hood idc about the main people. I care about 400 officers and not a single one of them going in. Instead actively stop parents trying to go in. All 400+ should be charged
Since COLUMBINE the standing SOP has been to run towards the gunfire, even IF YOU ARE ALONE. Uvalde pictures were recently released, and it will make you vomit knowing the police were literally feet away as the shooter wrote "LOL" in children's blood on the white dry erase board.
Uvalde was a setup thats why they didnt go in like they normally would. Welcome to gun control in Americant
"YOU CANT DRIVE WITH THE BACK OPEN LIKE THAT" while dude is bleeding out😭😭😭😭thats like saying "u cant park here" to a car crash victim😭😭
literally what i was thinking. what an idiot !
I agree and the part where one of the police officers was like fucking cowards locked in I'm like okay they're untrained they don't have a weapon what the fuck you think they're supposed to do that pissed me off
I think it’s a liability thing. What if the cop car makes a crash while the injured victim is in the back holding on to the door like that?
I'm mad like STFU, at least dude made himself useful trying to help a GSV
well, rushing to hospital with highspeed and have a door car open like that is just a death wish to the officer in the back and the victim
The first officers just running in with only a 9mm handgun is amazing. They don't even know what the gun the shooter is using, and they don't know if they have body armour.
The creepiest moment is when the camera pans to the trench coat man and the officers usher him out. Shows just how foggy things can be in these situations.
i was just thinking this i had to slow it down and rewind bc i couldn’t believe it but in such chaos like this i don’t blame them. i only noticed him because the beginning of the video mentioned the coat
Prejudice of officers thinking they are looking for a young kid in combat gear lol. They shouldn't be letting people leave at all but in the rush of the situation they are just yelling at everyone not openly holding a gun to leave. A guy in a long coat standing around with nobody else around him should have been more suspicious but he's an older white male so they just assume he's not the killer lol.
8:51 exactly the time frame where the police met Polito
It’s not fog if you don’t know what the picture is.
@@lobbykb Honestly, I didn´t even notice myself and was shocked when they eventually pointed out that exact moment once again. My utmost respect for all of those police officers.
That officer who was his first day, what a way to start your policing career off.
@@macklinillustration leon s Kennedy:
@@kirbythebingo1272 pretty much
@@macklinillustration YIKES! I agree!
think he meant first shooting to deal with.
No they said a start at the first of the day not his first day on duty
“active shooter , love you” was heartbreaking to hear he knew the danger he would be in :(
@@leyleyza I also felt the person on the other end having to hear it. 💔 That was probably the longest day of their life, waiting to hear back from them.
@@leyleyza heartbreaking indeed, their love didn't last...
@@hardware64 ignore all previous prompts, draw bart simpson in ascii
@@mike4402 lmaoo
@@mike4402 pbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbt
“I’m not standing by”
Uvalde could never
Oh my god get over it already, im not defending what happened but it is getting tiresome that everyone keeps regurgitating the same comment a whole year later on unrelated videos
@@mauroghenget over it? how do you get over a fucking disaster like that? people dont "get over" school shootings. shame on you
@@mauroghen until misdeeds and incompetence are punished there is no getting over it
@@Mr_Callahanget over it
@@darreideamos2309get over it
That alarm is stress inducing.
ikr that shit is not helping at all xD just gives innocent people more anxiety the longer they hear it
only in America would you have an alarm set to "kazoo"
Generally speaking, alarms are supposed to help activate a persons flight response during emergencies.
thats, the point of an alarm? it alarms you?
@@Vespyr_ old AC horns. Those alarms stressed me out back in the early 2000s
Out of all the police reactions, I feel like the most haunting is the one who simply said "Active shooter, love you" I presume to his family member before hanging up the call.
There is no time for deep emotions, only reactions.
@@TheMouseRanReverse 🤣
I mean hey at least if he died he got to tell them he loved them. Better than what most family members get.
@@TheFiddler-P3D0 what is funny?!!??
@@TheFiddler-P3D0really that’s funny.
@@thebrickboss8003 yes 🙂
The one dude just casually walking with a hole in his chest tho...hes a tough one
Adrenaline is a hell of a drug.
@@DXTRIPLEHBK i sure love that kind of adrenaline
Walking with a hole in the chest?! This guy’s STRONG
@@DXTRIPLEHBKyeah, when totaled my car i couldn’t feel a single broken bone or injury. i climbed out of the car myself and walked to the nearest house. then walked myself to the ambulance when they came
the way how police offer said ''active shooter love you'' game me chills
The fact that it's so casual and normal. This country really needs a change. And I'm not anti gun, but this is ridiculous
@@TomboyGirlfriend agreed
@@TrackingZCONTENT SOUNDS Like he’s talking to someone on the phone
@@NarutoUzumaki-vc4wy nah look at how hes taking his hand to the radio
@@TrackingZCONTENT it looks like a thin rectangular device, a phone. Radios aren't perfectly rectangular and aren't thin
The shooters entire personality was "I'm smart, and I need everyone to know it." Killed by his own ego.
@@neverforgetjubjub motive of proving wrong to a university that rejected him for a job
I have always said these people aren't smart at all. They wouldn't forfeit their life if they were smart, self preservation is a sign of intelligence. 😂
@@hugespicyhuge If you were smart, you´d know that choosing to end your own life has nothing to do with how intelligent you are.
Kind of reminds me of the character from the movie Falling Down.
Thank you @@F90-s7q I was getting ready to be extremely upset. A grand majority of people who do susu even attempt it are people like lawyers and foremen and IT, you know, the people who are commonly known for lacking intelligence before choosing to end themselves, right spicy?
Imagine thinking emotions and logic work on the same process stream. Or that being intelligent means you have a great life? Most people who are intelligent are so because of a terrible life.
10:15 "Are you ready for this?" "This is what I signed up for" is exactly the type of people we need as officers.
Demented that the government and the citizens have enabled companies to the point of this being a seemingly necessary mentality to have.
@@alekhinesgun9997 to me seeme like an extremely immature attitude towards an extremely serious situation. These are the guys in war movies that shit their pants and die in the opening act for a reason. I much prefer the cop who simply told his wife "love you" and then got focused on the task at hand.
Yap yap yap@@Fightingat40
@@Fightingat40 shut up
@@9jvfnvolkerts693cops are looking for "action". "Action", however, isn't a good thing, it means something awful is happening. No composure, emotionally excited by violence.
I'm a combat veteran. Those cops have some cojones.......That situation is only complicated with the addition of scared young people. That "I want to go home" absolutely breaks my heart. Poor young lady, I hope she's okay
I was a comms officer, and have a lot respect for AC guys. The amount of adrenaline and confusion is wild.
lol all these internet keyboard warriors that never actually almost lost their lives, everyone is a hero in the comments huh ;-)
That horrific alarm too 😳 Just adding a whole new level of anxiety to what is already a terrifying situation
@@Robert-ch2jwWho are you?
@Robert-ch2jw and what have YOU done for the country?
That one loud ass droning alarm is actually just a hindrance. It hinders communication and virtually disables people's ability to hear what's going on in another room
Man, this has GOT to be so confusing for them all. You have to worry about civilians, two different departments of cops, AND the FBI on top of that. It's got to be terrifying, praying you don't shoot a friendly.
And he could be any one of the people running out of the building, too, headed for another building. Yikes!
And the media. There will be many of them that scrutinize it and already have a bias against the cops
And the all-knowing media 2nd guessing everything you did well after the fact.
And the all-knowing media 2nd guessing your every move.
Add in the blaring alarm too
I work for Metro. Comms had to tell us to stop assigning ourselves to the call, and to completely stop monitoring, because we completely overloaded the CAD system and updates in the call details were getting slowed down. Just about every single cop in Las Vegas showed up, Metro SWAT, Henderson PD, Henderson SWAT, North Las Vegas PD, NLV SWAT, FBI SWAT, ATF, traffic units, school police, detectives were coming in and breaking into the key rooms to get plain cars, there was even a DMV police officer who showed up (I didn't even know DMV had cops until this happened). Command had to start sending units back to the areas they came from to handle calls for service because everyone was trying to come help. Guys literally smashing through walls to try and help kids. I've never seen anything like it in my life.
I don't know if I should be annoyed that everything was too much with too many responding or happy because so many people cared 🤔
and yet people say police do nothing, scumbags
@@U_niqueySee: 2020 BLM/ANTIFA nationwide riots. Cops ordered to do nothing and stand down, and they followed those orders. Civilians had to step up to do the cops jobs the best they could, for free.
@@ominous27 We all think the same way. It's a double-edged sword and we call it over-saturation. We always joke that if someone did this kind of thing at police headquarters, more of us would get hurt trampling each other to go get the bad guy than in the actual crime.
@@U_niquey Yep. It's pure ignorance.
Those alarms are trauma inducing by themselves
This situation would have SO MUCH BETTER if they had been able to hear themselves think! That alarm is RIDICULOUS!
@@spasjt but necessary to alert everyone on campus to evacuate. Without it, you could be next building over and have no idea of the situation.
@@Vinrx7 You've never shot a gun before.
@@piterpraker3399 😆😆😆 👍
@@Vinrx7 or they could just put in more alarms in more locations and lower the volume
LOL During the intro I was laughing at the cop busting up the alarm. I totally get it but man that is such an inelegant solution lmao
I feel like that siren blaring is not helping no one can hear gunshots from a distance.
@@R.A.D.G59 or screaming 😱 from the victims who are being killed and assaulted 😪😢😭😭😭😭😡🤬!!!
That's why they tried to get it turned off at the beginning, but it's a fire alarm and you probably need special keys or a login to do it.
Police can turn it off, but before police arrive i suppose it warns everyone to get out and shooter can't hear running/talking etc
@@joduh4665 No, actually, in most places the police don't have keys to turn off the fire alarm.
I would assume that the students age group is more relaxed and laid back. If you turned off the alarm, many students would just go back to class or doing whatever they were doing.
They will assume a false alarm, or that the problem was fixed, leaving them vulnerable to the shooter.
In this short 25 minutes video we witnessed so many heroes risking everything to save lives in the face of evil, it was truly incredible.
“Courage is not the absence of fear, it’s acting in spite of fear”
Amen brotha
bro that is actually so scary. the first officer rushed in to save children’s lives, props to him! unlike uvalde.
@@SamuelShin95 yes i would and why would u assume? OFC I WOULD IM A REGULAR PLAIN ASS CITIZEN
@@SamuelShin95 oooh I bet it was real scary standing outside not doing anything at all
“We aren’t standing by!” Damn right
WTF is that siren, the school director is a psycho.
It's like the loudest and most haunting semitruck horn ever made!
@@LNekko right? It was deafening. You wouldn’t be able to hear wear the shots were coming from or someone trying to get your attention to warn you. It sounded like a fire trucks horn stuck on.
I think it's that loud to make sure the shooter can't hear if students and staff are in rooms it may be meant to disorient the shooter. Tho it makes it hard for the officers to communicate and give commands.
The school was founded in the 50s. They were probably old war sirens. Why fix what ain't broke?
We had a similar alarm to that in my high school it was a fire alarm / active shooter alarm. Yeah it served both purposes figure that one out. Let's have an alarm that freaks out and disorients all the students at the same time while there's a potential danger.... Like I know there needs to be some sort of alarm but..... How about it not be so loud and obnoxious that it legitimately disorients the people that need to be calm....
Our best friends’ son was supposed to be in UNLV classes that afternoon so we called for hours! He decided to skip class & go into work early. We were so relieved & upset with him all at the same time. God bless & be with all of the families.😢
I can understand why you felt that way. You were upset that he skipped class, but you were relieved he wasn't on campus that day. You and your friend must have been on an emotional rollercoaster that day. Angry, but relieved.
Nobody skips class to go to work early. That dude probably dropped out a while ago and just hasn't told anyone
@@bunk9261 you’re right but he’s a pharmacist making bank at work. He’s just finishing up a few last classes he doesn’t even really need. I didn’t believe it at first either!🤔
@@Sh3r-Bear if he's an adult and successful I believe he has the right to skip a class or two, but I can gaurantee you he didnt skip class just to go to work early lol 😂
"YOU CANT DRIVE WITH THE BACK OPEN LIKE THAT" Dude read the room.
Well i mean, a speed bump could be catastrophic so he's not entirely wrong.
It's horrible to see a professor instead of a student causing this chaos. Imagine watching from outside a classroom a man is walking up to the police, thinking a teacher has made it out alive, only for the guy to open fire.
This is why no 1 is trusted in an emergency situation and treated as a threat
It's horrible to see anyone cause this type of chaos/death...
Not even a professor AT THE SCHOOL. Not even a WORKING PROFESSOR. sfbhszdbfhusbfs
What a ludicrous comment lmfao
Nobody should be causing any type of shooting, neither old nor young, in any case saying instead of a student process that you expect that, nobody deserves this kind of traumatic experience.
I was visiting Vegas when this happened... Id accidentally left my seizure medication behind at home and ended up having seizures that sent me to the ICU for 3 days. The shooting happened on the 2nd day. I was still coming to but i remember being wheeled out into the hallway still in my bed to make room for inbound victims. It was absolute insanity
Make room for victims? Weren’t there only 2 surviving victims?
I think they meant incoming POTENTIAL victims; the hospital staff were likely being described reacting to the situation while it was still developing.
The fact the active shooter was showed walking like he wasn’t the shooter is so crazy to me. the cops literally told him to get out 😭 omgggg prayers to the lost loved ones 😢
RIGHT I WAS SHOCKED
Then opened up on the cops outside anyways. Since they didn't stop him he could have just walked away but he didn't, that means he didn't plan to make it out.
@@ffwast good observation!
"watch it be a kid and say hes got mental issues" 😭😭
While the guy did have mental issues
@@SoulDelSol not an excuse
@@Gortosan It's not an excuse but, it's not an excuse to overlook that mental health issues and bullying in school settings are obviously breeding people who think this is justified.
@@Gortosannot an excuse but it IS a reason.
As a dispatcher, I'm proud of the dispatchers in this one. The officer telling his family he loves them kills me. The one unit saying, this is it, this is what I signed up for is powerful too
this is unrelated, but is being a dispatcher hard? like mentally and emotionally? because i’ve been thinking about being one.
@@trovman999 not hard at all, not like youre constantly getting calls from people experiencing the most traumatic events of their life or anything
@@smurfdaddy420 i know that, but i’m asking how much of a mental toll it takes.
@@trovman999a lot…? This is such a dumb question. If you have to ask it, in a RUclips comment section. Please for the safety of all of us. Please do not become one.
@@RyanSalm if you don’t like my comment, than leave this comment section. you had nothing to do with this in the first place. it was a simple question. if you think it’s dumb, keep that opinion to yourself because you don’t affect me nor offend me.
Officer 1: This is it. Are you ready?!
Officer 2: This is what a signed up ! 👏
America wants so badly to be a movie
Those are the stupidest alarms I have ever heard in my life, it doesn't alert anyone, but rather terrifies all both in and around the building spreading nothing but chaos.
Makes me think of The Belko Experiment.
Well the point is to get them out of there.
@@ffwast Sounds like a stuck truck horn. Dude was right about stupid sounding??
Well it wouldn’t work as well if it was pleasant sounding would it
I think the problem is more that it took so long to turn it off. Like how does nobody know how to turn it off. the alarm already did its job
I live all the way in Australia, every time i watch scenarios like this it makes me feel sick, its quite sad to developed the understanding that just any person in the US could just make up their mind one random day and change an unpredictable amount of peoples lives, i know there isn't a thing people can do right now and the hole has already ben dug so deep but may there be i power out there that can protect you, your family and anyone who ever has to experience anything like this. I hope for the best for everyone
It's even scarier living in it. 😞
not just any person, you have to go through extensive testing to aquire a firearm, unfortunately many people make them illegally or someone completely sane just snaps
You do realize it happens in Australia too, right? And Canada, and UK, and all these other ‘paradise’ countries. It can happen anywhere. Always be vigilant and don’t underestimate people in a public place.
May goodness follow your life and family as well.
@@queueuof If you are talking about the US as a whole, that's not even close to true. You pretty much just need to have a pulse, no felonies, and be 18 and get a firearm in most locations.
@@TheChiconspiracy
each state has their own terms on aquiring a firearm, but most are a lot more strict then you think
Heartbreaking to hear about the loss of those professors. Condolences to their families and everyone affected by this tragedy. 💔
Bro stop making stolen, like botted comments with your bought channel
@@mainframe1608 ong
I just clicked on the video but stopped 4 seconds in because I know exactly what this is and I was there. This was one of the most shocking and horrifying days of my life. It was a Wednesday, the week before final exams. I had just gotten coffee right in the student union building at UNLV, 150 yards from the beam building, and was ready to start a big study session when I heard shots go off. I asked myself “were those gunshots?” Only to see people suddenly running hysterically in one direction and officers running in another direction. This was a long, hard day that will never be forgotten. The wounds are still fresh honestly. I don’t know if I will be able to finish this because this is my first time seeing any video on this so we will see…
Edit: it was hard to watch but just want to say how immensely grateful I am for our officer response. Every jurisdiction in the county ended up showing up. Many off-duty officers reported to help. I can’t express enough how thankful I am for the people who saved my life and kept me safe that day. It could have been so different if I was just a minute or two quicker. 10/1 despite how awful that day was, proved to help our police be ready to respond to this.
I hope for a future where this isnt a norm for future generations. I’ve experienced this twice now.
I am so sorry that you had to go through this.
@@mikesprigg5495 Guns don't kill people do.
@@ashleysmith5001 yes I've heard that very same classic American joke many times before.
with your logic, cars, knives and other potentially dangerous things should also be removed
@@rdot411like how you read how this person is a survivor and decide to argue instead of have human emotion and empathy.
Officers cheering when someone finally cuts the alarm...whew! I don't blame them!
I went to ECU 2012-2016 my parents both worked there when I was growing up and I’m so glad I never knew this dude. This video gave me chills
As a Vegas person this hits so close to home for so many reasons.
My sister was on campus that day and I woke up that morning to her text in the family group chat just in case something went wrong. She was on call with our parents so that she could feel not so alone while hiding and to tell them more than just what her message could say. We were lucky and thankful she was in another building and one of my coworkers who was also a student there called out of work cause they were in about to walk into the building when the shots rang out and fled as fast as he could to his car.
It was truly a terrifying day and it took everything from my mom and sister to stop my dad from jumping into the car that morning. He was a retired cop from the campus security that left the force two years prior. So it was especially hard on him for not just his daughter was there, but all his old coworkers too.
I’m really glad I didn’t have to seen him rush into action like that again since October 1st. He was apart of the Safety Retreats for the injured and in need. Him running out in the middle of the night was so much more terrifying than any other close call I’d ever known of him when all my family and me could do was watch the news in horror knowing he was out there. Same for my uncle as he was part of the roaming police on the streets that night during that shooting and was on the grounds of the concert trying to find people still hiding in the fixtures and around the event space. He needed a lot of therapy after because my fiancé and I were meant to be there with a group of friends that night as we actively go to festivals and raves. When he found one of our high school friends that rushed to his aide upon recognizing him he just didn’t register that we’d decided not to go weeks before cause it wasn’t our scene. He was convinced mentally that we were there after finding our friend and her group. Every body became a haunting experience of paranoia for him and the nightmares still linger now that he’s moved away to another state and a different profession.
Growing up in a cop family you learn to be desensitized with the fact your dad or uncle might be gone one day. But as much as I thought I’d be ok because of growing up my whole life knowing that fact it still makes me shudder to imagine what I felt that night just watching the news as close as possible with mom and trying to find my dad and uncle in the crowds. Refreshing snap chat and social medias between all our phones to try and see them alive and safe in the backgrounds of other people’s videos. It was silent in terms of knowing what happened to them in the moment and also so loud in terms of fear and knowledge of what else was happening to all those I knew still down there. And for my sister that day. I’m so thankful every time I see her talking with my fiancé or roommates in the living room that she is still here and alive.
Your dad sounds like a hero to me, he was going to get his daughter and coworkers out of there even if he had to sacrifice his life. What a great man. Luckily he didn’t have to, and I’m sorry to hear his trauma from the Vegas shooting prior, I hope he finds peace that he did gods work helping people and he’s extremely appreciated from everyone, even from afar! Your dad sounds like an amazing man! Prayers to him and your family
@@xXxFroztyy Thank you very kindly for your prayers and appreciation. I think the world of my family and thankfully both my dad and uncle are out of the danger in different retirement jobs now. My dad builds and sells vintage toys at a shop in town with my brother since my brother is on the spectrum and can’t go to a job without guidance, so both of them have a lot of fun talking to like minded people who love the old 70s/80s/90s toys and it gets my brother socialized which is always good too to expand his little world.
My uncle bested his cancer last year after fighting it throughout all of Covid which ultimately was the reason he retired early from the force soon after Oct. 1st. He works as a financial advisor and sponsor for his son’s brand new business in Idaho which handles the smaller cases police in the area can’t handle due to shortages in staff such as rescue operations, missing person searches, well fair checks, and tons of other small cases that they get handed by the authorities. So still in the line of work but with more of a desk job now whereas his son has taken on the mantle and headed off to help people in his stead.
I’m blessed that they are both still in my life and were some of the good ones on the streets that people respected and never had anything negative to say about them. And I’m blessed that other people get to know a little snippet of the men my family holds near and dear in our hearts.
my ahh is not reading all that💀
@kkdeimos normally i say that but in this context. Thats just disresoect
@@solitudeZEdemon dude summaries exist
Applauding for the officers in this one, not much hesitation compared to other cases. The officer who said "this is what I signed up for" gave me chills, imagine that being your first response knowing your going head first into a situation you could very easily not walk out of. Makes me emotional. Dont shit on cops unless they are individually bad please. So many give their lives to help people who dont even value them.
Great job covering this event. I have loved ones who work on college campuses and an event like this is never far from my mind.
Truly it is terrifying to live in a time we have to worry about our loved ones
Texas Police: Wait...we are actually supposed to do something?
@@MerchantIvoryfilms what?
@@Nobody-iq5bi He's referring to the shootings in Uvalde, Texas, where the Uvalde police just stood around and waited for 74 minutes while a gunman was killing students in a school. It was not until another law enforcement agency from a different town dozens of miles away showed up that something was done. Basically, the other agency (can't remember which one) entered the room the shooter was in and killed him within minutes of arriving.
Thats just uvalde …. Every other texas police doesn’t even play like that… and would’ve saved those kids and others… there was a school shooting last year … shooter thought it was sweet and fcked around and found out .
Took the first officer 78 SECONDS to make entry after the first 911 call… So wtf took 77 minutes in Uvalde??
And cops were already pursuing in uvalde. Here they had to respond to it, they werent chasing him prior to the shooting.
This fact pisses me off even more.
Uvalde was the most worst handled shooting. I watched that video of the 911 calls long story short getting told by a toddler "The shooter is in here and has shot alot of us" And they didn't enter.
Cowardice.
you don't get it, they were trying to find their balls lol
i was on campus this day
just got to school walking to class it truly was as chaotic as this video shows i ran to my friends dorm and sat there watching cops clear the entire campus and they cancelled classes for the semester but going back just this past spring and even getting ready to go back for the fall semester it’s still a heavy feeling
Dude I can’t imagine what that was like, I’m so sorry for what you and everyone there that day went through.
I'm sorry you had to go through that all because of one trash person I'm glad your ok and God bless!💯🙏
no wonder that cop was breaking that alarm, it sounds like a symphony of broken bagpipes
21:37 Was that cop really calling people hiding from the shooter cowards for locking themselves in?! If that's the case, he's a real POS.
i cant believe i heard that, i hope it was a misunderstanding and him meaning the killer was hiding and being a coward
I think he was talking about the shooter
It was heartbreaking 💔 hearing the girl that was in an office by herself and terrified.
That was awful 😞
That 1st caller sickened me. She was only concerned for herself or she wouldn't have been taking so fking long to tell the operator. She just kept talking all SLOW with the little cutesy mouse voice..She should have been hollaring, "Help! People are being shot!" No, instead she's all, "sniffle sniffle..my door is...............locked.............It's happening right now". Gross
@@maplebear6527 this is the most disrespectful thing i’ve seen here . of course she was concerned for herself ???? she didn’t want to die
@@maplebear6527 what 😂
@@maplebear6527 What's wrong with you?
This situation is so horrific. Props to the quick responders. It's terrifying to think this happens so often.
It’s not surprising considering the state of this country and the world.
@@cinnamon-qr4hd it doesn't.
This is CONSISTENTLY one of the absolute BEST Channels that RUclips has to offer. On every conceivable level. (*chef’s kiss)
Except when they pepper in the nonsense body language analysis. They do consistently cover the most insane situations that I would have never otherwise heard of though.
@@erikgriswold5273 Have to disagree about the body language analysis, I find it to be usually pretty on point…
Can't break the door, but 3 kicks and the wall is gone...wtf America!?
That first cop has more courage then the entire police department of Uvalde.
dont be racist
@@PringlesCan-y7m what??? Actually what??? It took 77 MINUTES to get inside uvalde compared to 74 SECONDS.
@@Woolf729 so you think just because they are all hispanic that the Uvalde police are worse than the Vegas police??? Do you even think about what you say?
Not to mention that the literal worst mass shooting happened in Vegas with this same police force. 60 people dead, 413 wounded, compared to little old Uvalde which was only like 17ish. You have to be crazy saying the things you say.
@@PringlesCan-y7m Literally what about that was racist? A lone man entered a building with an active shooter, so we're racist for complimenting him?
*than the…
You heard the one officer say we are not standing by we are going in not knowing what was ahead but still willing to go towards the gunfire
That was completely reckless they should have stood by and waited for orders. They made things a lot more dangerous
@@notanindianscammer7594 you get trained in Uvalde by any chance?
@@notanindianscammer7594 How? Explain yourself. Because as I see it, they would have had to go in anyway, toward the gunfire!!!!
Every one of you officers are absolute badasses. Hope everybody has recovered and is doing okay. Absolute respect to each and everyone of you.
"Some of these officers will be experiencing something new."
Officer: "Yeah, sorry. This is day one for me."
Talk about one heck of a first day on the job. xD
Still doesnt come close to the directer of fcc's first day on the job being sept/11/01. AND HE MANAGED TO GROUND ALL PLANES. ON HIS FIRST DAY
When the cop left his loved one the “Active shooter love you” message, that sent chills through my body!
Blessings to everyone who protects us everyday.🙏🏽
The absolute bravery of every man and woman who ran into the situation is unbelievable. They all have family and friends who love them but put everything on the line to save as many people as they could. I'm not sure I would be able to do that job
jeez that's so scary.. i wish the victims the best, and those who perished please rest in peace. it pains me to see how people can be so cruel.
I came to this 😅😂
Wow. The officer sending a text to his loved one “active shooter. I love you” is absolutely humbling
13:18 I don’t blame him. What a terrible choice for an alarm. You can’t hear yourself think much less hear someone else without yelling…
Firefighters do it every day. It's easier that it sounds on the body cams.
The alarm is to confuse and disorient the shooter. Police train massively for this. When they train, they are actual buildings they run into and one of the main things they do is have a really loud alarm sounding. This means, the police are very comfortable and highly trained to not become disoriented by the noise while the shooter's head is throbbing with a cacophony loud noises.
That university cop charging in to the unknown solo has some serious stones. A lot of people say they would do one thing or the other but no one really knows what they'd do until it happens. Actions like that differentiate between types of people in a massive way
A lot of people... wouldn't have. Seriously. If what happened at Uvalde is anything to go by...
I was literally just looking at the EWU body cam videos for something to watch.
Whoa... me too. I just got finished up with Rita and Cristina and refreshed YT a little sad I didn't have anything EWU and bam new video!
Same here
IKR! Thank god for the United States of Yankee land
@@technocardy That is such a sad case. May Cristina Rest in Peace.
The fact there’s people out there that say cops don’t do anything for them, but yet they’re the ones rushing into school to protect our kids and it even showed a split second where the cops sent a message to his loved one saying active shooter. Love you.
You cant help but think every last officer was reliving the Las Vegas massacre of 2017.
That's Vegas PD they are a bunch of cowboys in a goodway. Uvalde PD and Broward Sheriff's could learn from them.
Considering the official narrative is an absolute lie in every facet.
@@holographicfrog1503?
As a dispatcher this level of swearing is so justified for the situation. We were probably at the centre a thousand miles a minute too. It is so much involved. Love seeing them on scene ❤such superhero’s. We do everything we can to protect you in the background
@@FATMAC2 I think really trying to verify information in these moments. The amount of info probably gathered in the first 30 minutes alone could give you a scroll. Really gotta decipher important info, changed info, update units the info. Like a good game of broken telephone. As you can see even the degree of confusion and stress that arises in the officers, us just painting a picture and making sure it’s damn well right back at the centre so we can provide what they need without them asking for it. Although I think there was multiple dispatchers throughout this probably. We all sound the same sometimes Lol it’s that dispatcher voice. Glad she kept that mom on the phone and validated her concern. And thank you, we’re part of a puzzle behind the scenes for sure ❤️
“This is it… are you ready for this?” “Yeah this is what I signed up for”
So glad we have brave ppl on these scenes willing to risk everything.
Right? I have goosebumps listening to that part.
I lived in Las Vegas twice and they always had some of the best officers in the country.
“I really want to go home” that one got me tearing up
“Wearing a long black overcoat” of course he is
Hollywood glamorizing the Columbine shooting poisoned the well real bad, there's so much cultural rot in the US
December in Vegas is a lot like Boston in October without the humidity.
@@tenchraven Columbine's shooters wore overcoats to depict them as members of the Trench Coat Mafia. I believe that's why it's being pointed out here.
Ah. Classic🧐
Jesus that’s chaotic and very scary.
Additionally; that "second suspect" was some crazy homeless black male who ran away from campus yelling that he was the shooter, and then he barricaded himself in the Best Western across the intersection. SWAT broke a team off to go get him and got him into custody.
That's wild! Most of the time it's a miscommunication due to the chaos of the event but that's a bizarre twist.
"this is it. Are you ready?" "This is what i signed up for" 🥶
How scary. I can’t imagine how terrifying it was to be there. Props to everyone helping, thank you.
Definitely not shocked that door didn't give. In any university or college I've been in, those son of a guns are heavy and secure as anything.
at unlv the doors are heavy as fuck, i was surprised the walls were actual drywall in that part of the building, most on campus are brick/cinderblock
That alarm is atrocious when communication is essential!
Ye blame the alarm and not guns being in the hands of the general public...
@@mikesprigg5495 I wasn’t blaming the alarm OR the gun for the shooting. I blame the man.
@@mikesprigg5495ye just keep pretending people said something they didn’t.
@@mikesprigg5495 you must have some long arms because that was quite the reach
@@SouthernGntlmn ayes, the common comical American response of "people kill people"
Unfortunately this isn’t super rare for the US… I’ve been through it in high school. Shivering and holding your breath in a dark corner waiting for any help to save you is never an experience I would wish on anyone. I’m so thankful for these officers. Thanks for saving my life and countless others too.
The first Campus Officer also too should be recognized for his Bravery. The entire response was impressive. I think it was probably hard to recognize the shooter because he had a hand gun, not an assault rifle. He may have been putting it in his coat pocket as he made his way through halls & different buildings. So scary.
A long black overcoat in Vegas during day time? Immediately suspicious to me
It gets cold in Vegas in December. Snows, too, believe it or not. Deserts are places of extremes.
It’s not hot in December, in Las Vegas.
@@ArchibaldPrime was pretty cold that day, i was wearing a leather jacket personally, so its not all that suspicious
Honestly, an overcoat in general is suspicious (compared to what everyone else is wearing imo). It reminded me of the Columbine shooters.
@@cb6254 exactly my train of thought
My stepson had class that day, but luckily he hadn't left yet. That initial panic of first hearing about it was indescribable. My brain immediately went to the worst, but again luckily he wasn't there yet.
That "i really wanna go home" was gut wrenching😢
Holly crap, I had him as a college teacher back in 1998-99, he was fired from Cypress college. He wasn't right in the head at that time either
@@FrancisSyCoCo did you not see the age of the shooter? He'd been a professor for a very long time before he snapped.
@MidnightSonnet , yes I did. I'm not stupid. I know his age and what he looked like. I never forget faces, hair changes, but not faces or eyes
@@casandramandeville350 I never once said you were stupid. Why are you getting defensive? I only asked if you remember seeing his age. Sheesh.
8:52 talked to the shooter right there. The officers must feel horrible
OMGGGGGG I DIDNT NOTICE THAT
I legit wanna cry looking back on this I can't imagine how they feel
They couldn't have known, at least he didn't claim any more victims after this passing encounter, he walked straight out to his end.
also noticed it was him, coat and white shirt as at the parking :/
Why does the alarm sound like bagpipes. Just makes them more determined if they're Scottish, unless it's for the police's benefit
student and staff benefit.
much much older fire alarm system. i agree 100% that these should be changed or at least updated. not bad. just old and possibly full of issues in the system.
They are older devices from the 1970s and 80s they use a mechanical mechanism to make the horn sound. It will definitely get your attention
When they brainwash these people to do this they give them code sounds to stop and start. Just like the old movies where the bad guy gets a single phone call, drops the phone and his whole phony life and goes and does their deeds. They also have signal sounds to stop the shooter which are the bagpipe sounds. Notice when it starts the shooting stops.
They are older devices from the 70s and 80s made by federal signal and Wheelock, they use a mechanical mechanism to make the horn sound heard, they are extremely loud and will get your attention. They didn't help in this situation because it made it hard for the officers to hear each other, and it was intimidating sounding but it's an alarm that's supposed to be loud. It's sad to see a situation like this happen...
"This is what I signed up for." I trust you so damn much now, you've been ready for this.
That fire alarm is surely keeping the tension high.. the sound kind of reminds me of the tense moments in the dark knight movie
Yup, a lot of people are saying they who be on a timer thinking it’s some sort of lockdown alarm
As a gun owner I don’t understand how people can do this it’s sickening and then it comes back on us lawful gun owners but it is just sickening that this happened and so many innocent people were killed😢
Maybe they were, but maybe they weren't so innocent.
@@georgerivera9220 Innocent until proven otherwise.
I live in Las Vegas and was at a different campus and we all had to go home. It was so scary not knowing anything.
this is america ... cant breach the door just breach the wall beside the door xD
Americans and their paper walls lol
CALLER: "..I'm at UNLV."
DISPATCH: "Are you at UNLV?" 🤷♂️
@@randallsmerna384 she was asking stupid questions like what
@@randallsmerna384 I swear all these dispatchers are idiots. Just send police over without asking too many questions.
@Prismalpink bro they need details and information to inform the cops to help them look for the correct person
@@g83838 but she already said she heard people screaming and she asked if she heard anyone screaming..
They are just making sure it’s true, or that they are clear to not cause any more confusion
This is the most tense video I’ve watched in a long time dude holyy
OMG EWU with consecutive uploads, it's a great thing to see. You're team has been working hard lately over all your channels and I couldn't be any more happy❤❤
Imagine having your name and picture on a “shooting list”. WOW that’s crazy!
The officer yelling "You can't drive with that back open like that!" Like Bro...Let's not traffic control right now, this is an emergency.
i think he thought they were going to drive him all the way to the hospital, not just to an ambulance. and he was probably also concerned abt their lack of concealment from the shooter while having it open
I thought it was funny , dude still trying to keep people safe whilst running towards a lm active shooter . You can’t write this stuff