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More than a month after her grandson shot her, the Texas killer’s grandmother is out of harm’s way

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More than a month after her grandson shot her, the Texas killer's grandmother is out of harm's way

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Salvador Ramos and his grandmother Celia González, whom he injured by shooting them in the face.

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It can already be said that Celia GonzálezUvalde, the Texas shooter’s grandmother is safe: she was discharged almost a month after her nephew shot her in the face.

The 66-year-old woman has been treated at University Health, San Antonio since the day Salvador Ramos, 18, assaulted her and then went to Robb Elementary School and killed 21 people, 19 of them children and girls.

According to Fox News, however, the medical center reported that the killer’s latest victim, a 10-year-old girl, is still hospitalized but is in good condition.

Celia González, 66, was finally discharged.

Celia González, 66, was finally discharged.

the first victim

After being hit by her nephew on the fateful May 24th, Celia walked out of the house with a bloody face and yelled at a neighbor: “Look what she did to me!”

For no clear reason, Ramos first shot her in the head, then stole her car and took her to school, crashing into a ditch before walking into the classroom and opening fire. The massacre ended because the police shot him down.

The killer lived with his grandparents because he did not get along with his mother, with whom he had quarreled because he had cut off the Wi-Fi in his home.

The woman called the police after her nephew shot her.

The woman called the police after her nephew shot her.

Ramos turned 18 on May 16 and quickly purchased two AR-15s and more than 300 firearm ammunition. He bought them at the Oasis Outback shop in Uvalde, a 10-minute drive from his grandmother’s house. Your grandfather, Roland Reyes74, told ABC News that neither he nor his wife knew his nephew had obtained the guns.

“I didn’t know he had guns. If I had known, I would have reported him,” said Rolando, who has a criminal conviction and can’t stay in a house with guns.

Grandfather revealed that his grandson was quiet: “Sometimes I took him to work with me. Not always, but sometimes. He didn’t go to school this last year. He didn’t graduate. One tried to tell him, but the today’s children think they know everything, he was very quiet, he spoke little.

Rolando Reyes, the grandfather of the assassin Salvador Ramos.

Rolando Reyes, the grandfather of the assassin Salvador Ramos.

When the teenager opened fire, he was out of the house. After the attack on Celia, a neighbor called him to tell him that his wife had been shot and killed, but by the time he got back to the Ramos’ home he had already escaped in his car.

“The neighbor called me and told me he was shot. When I got there, he told me he was gone. I haven’t assimilated it yet, “Reyes said.

terrifying last words

The grandmother of the little heroine Amérie Jo Garza, one of the shooter’s victims, recounted what the killer said just before starting to shoot at close range. The monster’s last sentence before the Texas massacre.

Amerie Jo Garza, 10, one of Ramos' small victims.  Photo: AFP

Amerie Jo Garza, 10, one of Ramos’ small victims. Photo: AFP

“You’re going to die” were Ramos’ last four words before killing everyone in the fourth grade class and dying at the hands of the agents. When he told her, he was facing his future prey.

After throwing the terrifying sentence, the killer saw how Garza was about to call the police and shot him before he could. “Instead of picking up the phone or taking it from him, she shot him,” her grandmother Irene Arreola told the Daily Beast.

Source: Clarin

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