Judge Tosses Teacher Testimony in Uvalde Cop Trial

Judge Tosses Teacher Testimony in Uvalde Cop Trial

> At a Glance

> – Judge Sid Harle barred jurors from considering Stephanie Hale’s account after the defense claimed new details surfaced mid-trial.

> – Adrian Gonzales faces 29 counts of child endangerment over the May 2022 Robb Elementary response that left 21 dead.

> – Why it matters: The ruling trims evidence jurors can weigh as the first criminal trial tied to the shooting enters its second week.

Corpus Christi – Testimony in the trial of ex-Uvalde school officer Adrian Gonzales hit a roadblock Thursday when the judge disqualified a teacher-turned-witness, saying undisclosed details risked a fair trial.

officially

Witness Details Emerge Mid-Trial

Stephanie Hale, who was on recess duty during the attack, told jurors she saw a figure in black with long hair carrying a rifle near the school’s south side and heard shots strike dirt around her-facts the defense says never appeared in her prior Texas Ranger interview.

  • Hale confirmed she did not mention the shooter’s clothing, hair, or flying debris in that May 28, 2022 statement.
  • Prosecutors countered by showing her grand-jury transcript, arguing the clothing detail was already documented.
  • Special prosecutor Bill Turner admitted the “clothing not being turned over” was improper.

Judge’s Ruling Limits Evidence

After hours of legal wrangling, Judge Harle ruled Hale’s testimony off-limits to jurors, denying the defense’s mistrial bid but crafting what he called a due-process remedy.

> “Memories of traumatic events change… you did absolutely nothing wrong.”

> – Judge Sid Harle to Stephanie Hale

Jurors returned to hear fresh staff testimony and additional 911 calls while Hale was thanked and excused.

Trial Outlook

  • Proceedings are expected to span two weeks.
  • Gonzales and former chief Pete Arredondo are the only officers criminally charged for the response.
  • A full conviction could mean life in prison.

Key Takeaways

  • A key eyewitness account was struck from evidence over late disclosures.
  • The setback trims the prosecution’s narrative but avoids a mistrial.
  • The closely watched trial continues as families seek accountability for the May 24, 2022 tragedy.

Author

  • Natalie A. Brooks covers housing, development, and neighborhood change for News of Fort Worth, reporting from planning meetings to living rooms across the city. A former urban planning student, she’s known for deeply reported stories on displacement, zoning, and how growth reshapes Fort Worth communities.

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