Officials are expecting a large crowd to fill the Nueces County Courthouse, when a jury trial is set to begin for a former officer charged in the failed response to the Uvalde school shooting in 2022.
Adrian Gonzalez, who was employed as a police officer with the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District when the deadly mass shooting happened May 24, 2022, at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, faces 29 counts of abandoning or endangering a child, according to court documents.
The case was transferred from Uvalde to Corpus Christi earlier this year.
Jury selection for the trial starts Jan. 5, with about 450 potential jurors reporting to the site at 8 a.m. that day, said Nueces County Sheriff J.C. Hooper.
Jury selection might take a couple of days, he said.
Since finding out about two months ago that the trial would be held in Nueces County, local law enforcement have been coordinating with the Texas Department of Public Safety, the Texas Rangers and the Uvalde County Sheriff’s Office to ensure safe access and security.
Nueces County will provide all of the security measures during the trial, with bailiffs present in the courtroom.
An additional security checkpoint area will be set up in the courthouse lobby so that people can move into the court tower more quickly, the sheriff said.
“A significant, very collaborative operations plan is in place, and I’m confident that we can provide a safe and secure and orderly venue to get this trial completed,” Hooper said. “The prediction is the trial will take three weeks, but you just never know.”
Members of the Uvalde County Sheriff’s Office, the Uvalde County District Attorney’s Office, along with Nueces County officials and the Texas Rangers are expected to attend the trial.
The trial will be open to the public and will be adjudicated by visiting judge Sid Harle, whom Gov. Greg Abbott reappointed in September as the presiding judge of the 4th Administrative Judicial Region of Texas.
The 4th Administrative Judicial Region did not respond to a request for information about the case transfer to Nueces County.
Both the sheriff’s office and the Nueces County judge’s office have fielded phone calls from national media sources, the sheriff said, and local, state and national media could attend the trial.
County officials aren’t certain how many reporters will be there, but they will plan accordingly, he said.
A designated parking area near the courthouse will be available for media to park, he said.
Court TV will livestream the trial, he said, so that people who are not in the courtroom will be able to watch it.
Video and audio will also be streamed to a secondary viewing area at the courthouse, he said.
He said that moving the case to Nueces County increased the likelihood that a jury could be selected from a larger pool of potential jurors and also provided more spacious accommodation and viewing areas at the courthouse for the prosecution and defense teams and witnesses during the trial.
“We’re just guessing it’s going to be very well attended, because we know there are family members of the victims coming from Uvalde,” he said. “There will be a prosecution team, a defense team and over 50 witnesses.
“Our goal is to see that it goes off in a safe, secure, orderly environment, and I believe we are prepared to provide that,” Hooper said.