Uvalde mass shooter’s ‘ex’ arrested for threatening to shoot schools
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The self-proclaimed ‘ex-girlfriend’ of Uvalde mass shooter Salvador Ramos has been arrested for making threats against the community – including planning to shoot up schools and bomb hospitals.
Victoria Gabriela Rodríguez-Morales, 19, is charged with 13 counts of making interstate threats between May and October 2023.
The sick taunts were aimed at schools, hospitals and Sex Child Porn law enforcement in the Texas town of Uvalde – the site of a devastating mass shooting by Ramos.
Ramos, 18, shot and killed 19 children and two teachers at Robb Elementary School on May 24, 2022 and injured 17 before he was killed by police.
Many of Rodríguez-Morales’ alleged threats reference the shooting, including calling the victims ‘little losers’ who ‘deserved those bullets’ per an FBI indictment.
Victoria Gabriela Rodríguez-Morales is accused of making threats against the community of Uvalde including threatening to shoot up schools and bomb hospitals
The 19-year-old claims to be the ex-girlfriend of Salvador Ramos (pictured) who killed 21 children and teachers during a mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in the Texas town
The Puerto Rican teen used Instagram, Gmail, Facebook and Kick.com to make the shocking threats, which resulted in the temporary closure of at least one Texas school, according to the Department of Justice.
Among the alleged threats are messages and posts which said: ‘I will haunt everyone from class 2022 to 2023. Each and every single one of y’all will die’ and ‘We will shoot Uvalde Texas high school and Texas A&M college’.
Several of the communications reference the mass shooting, including naming Pete Arredondo, the Texas school district police chief fired for his response to the massacre.
In one chilling post, an account under the name Gabriela Morales wrote: ‘Don’t believe me, try me. Ask Pete Arredondo what happened four days before the massacre. Me and Salvador wanted to kill them kids together but by that time I couldn’t get there’.
Another from an account which prosecutors have linked to Rodríguez-Morales said: ‘The kids at Robb Elementary deserved those bullets they deserved to die. I’m glad though that my ex achieved something we both wanted to do’.
Rodríguez-Morales previously faced juvenile delinquency proceedings in Texas and was detained in 2018. During this time she admitted to threatening to ‘kill public officials, shoot schools, and kill teachers and students’.
In May 2020, she was freed, but forced to return to Puerto Rico as one of the conditions of her release.
But prosecutors say the twisted teen has continued to make chilling threats against the community.
Prosecutors say Rodríguez-Morales used social media accounts to make a barrage of threats against Uvalde officials
The Puerto Rican teen previously admitted making similar threats while facing juvenile delinquency proceedings in Texas
The FBI said the teen has been under investigation since at least 2020 after the threats continued to come
As well as schools, she is said to have threatened hospitals, writing: ‘Your children’s hospital may blow in pieces If y’all don’t do as I say’ and ‘there will be bombs at the Uvalde memorial hospital’, according to the criminal complaint.
Threats were also made against Kimberly Mata-Rubio, whose daughter was killed in the Uvalde shooting and who ran to become mayor of Uvalde.
Prosecutors allege Rodríguez-Morales said: ‘If Mata Rubio wins the elections I will kill her’.
Investigators have been looking into the teen since 2020 and claim she made repeated calls to the Uvalde Police, the Uvalde High School, the Morales Junior High School, the Texas Public Safety Department – Texas Rangers Uvalde, the Uvalde Fire Department, and the Uvalde High School Department of Human Resources from phones belonging to her mom and another relative.
Messages sent from email address schoolshooter893@gmail.com also demanded ‘$830,000 cash’ to prevent an attack, according to the indictment.
One directed to City Hall on September 24 had the subject line, ‘kill you all’ and read: ‘We will kill each and every one of you We will shoot and blow up Uvalde Texas high school and Texas A&M college.
‘Don’t try me I got people there that will help me do that shit I don’t regret for a second the plan that I did with Salvador Ramos I’m glad that some of them kids blood runs in my hands.’
Each the thirteen counts of conviction carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison – with Rodríguez-Morales facing up to 65 years in prison in total.
Rodríguez-Morales faces up to 65 years in prison if convicted on all 13 counts
Sick taunts allegedly made by Rodríguez-Morales include claiming the victims of the Uvalde massacre ‘deserved those bullets’
Prosecutors have also linked her to the email address schoolshooter893@gmail.com, which sent threatening messages to several agencies
If the defendant is found guilty, a federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.
‘The U.S. Attorney’s Office has no tolerance for illegal threats, especially threats that target people who are the victims of the horrific mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas,’ said U.S. Attorney W. Stephen Muldrow.
‘We hope that this arrest brings a sense of peace to those who were targeted by the defendant.’
‘Threatening with violence, under any context, is unacceptable behavior. Making threats of violence to schools and other public institutions, is a federal crime,’ added Joseph González, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI San Juan Field Office.
‘School shootings are one of the most heinous of violent acts, and those impacted by this tragedy, such as the family, friends and co-workers of the victims of the Uvalde school shooting, deserve to grieve and process their experiences in peace.
‘The subject in this case was hundreds of miles away from the place she intended to torment through threats of violence. Yet she was still identified, located and arrested. May this serve as public notice that this behavior will not be tolerated, in Puerto Rico or anywhere else in the nation.’
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