In an effort to correct his about the shooting that claimed the lives of 19 children and two adults at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott again misinformed the public 鈥 this time about another mass shooting in Texas.
On November 5, 2017, a gunman stormed the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs 鈥 killing 26 people and wounding 22 others.
In a response to a question about background checks at a Friday press conference, Abbott said he believed background checks wouldn't have prevented Sutherland Springs from happening.
鈥淟ook at what happened in the shooting at Sutherland Springs. There was a background check that was done. It was done in a flawed way that allowed the shooter to get a gun,鈥 he said.
A lawyer for the Sutherland Spring victims said Abbott鈥檚 characterization that the events of Sutherland Springs prove background checks are not a viable solution is misleading.
"That is not true. The opposite is true,鈥 attorney Jamal Alsaffar told TPR. 鈥淭he federal court found after hearing months of evidence 鈥 thousands of pages of documentary evidence that, in fact, the federal government was liable in the Sutherland Springs case because background checks would have worked."
Moments after hearing Abbott's take on Sutherland Springs, Alsaffar was inundated with calls asking him to correct the record.
Intentional or not, Alsaffar said Abbott is again misinforming the public.
Earlier this year, Federal Judge Xavier Rodriguez found the government liable for $230 million in damages from the Sutherland Springs shooting because the Air Force failed to send the criminal record of the shooter 鈥 a former airman 鈥 to the FBI.
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The case itself revealed a systemic problem within the Air Force and other government agencies of not supplying that data to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System.
After the 2017 shooting, fellow Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn cosponsored bipartisan legislation called the , which was intended to make sure government agencies properly report criminal information to the nation's background check system.
Universal background checks are immensely popular with the public. . In attempting to diminish their effectiveness, it is unclear if Abbott would support them. Abbott鈥檚 office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A two hour drive east of Uvalde, the families of Sutherland Springs still grieve and are still waiting for resolution in that mass killing.
The federal government must decide early next month if it will appeal Judge Rodriguez鈥檚 $230 million ruling against the Air Force.
鈥淚t鈥檚 about responsibility and accountability, absolutely. And when you are at fault like the federal government was for the church shooting at Sutherland Springs, that you take responsibility for it,鈥 said Alsaffar.
Alsaffar called out the Biden administration, saying that not appealing the ruling is one way the president can act to stem the carnage of gun violence in America.
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