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A 15-year-old German girl has revealed the twisted Texas gunman told her he was going to shoot up an elementary school 15 minutes before he opened fire.

The child, named only as Cece, said Salvador Ramos – the now-dead 18-year-old gunman –  told her moments before the massacre that he had blasted his grandmother in the face and was planning to attack an elementary school.

Screenshots of the pair’s correspondence, obtained from the girl by CNN, reveal the exchange, which began at just after 11:01 am CT – less than a half hour before Ramos stormed Robb Elementary School in Uvalde.

The text, viewed by the outlet, reportedly saw Ramos tell the teen he loved her. 

Minutes later, at 11:06 am, Ramos reportedly wrote, ‘I just shot my grandma in her head.’

Seconds later, he added, ‘Ima go shoot up a[n] elementary school rn [right now].’ 

The messages were his last contact with the girl, whom he’d been messaging over apps such as Instagram and FaceTime for weeks.

Salvador Ramos legally purchased two AR-15 style rifles including the one he used in yesterday's attack after his 18th birthday last week. The gunman also bought more than 300 rounds of ammunition

Salvador Ramos legally purchased two AR-15 style rifles including the one he used in yesterday's attack after his 18th birthday last week. The gunman also bought more than 300 rounds of ammunition

Salvador Ramos legally purchased two AR-15 style rifles including the one he used in yesterday’s attack after his 18th birthday last week. The gunman also bought more than 300 rounds of ammunition

It comes as witnesses to the Texas school shooting rampage on Thursday questioned the early police response to the massacre, as bereaved parents said they pleaded for officers to storm the building and stop the bloodshed — to no avail.

As the town of Uvalde mourned 19 children and two teachers killed in America’s latest mass shooting, Jacinto Cazares, whose daughter Jacklyn died in Tuesday’s massacre, said he raced to Robb Elementary School in the small town of Uvalde when he heard about the shooting.

‘There was at least 40 lawmen armed to the teeth but didn’t do a darn thing (until) it was far too late,’ Cazares told ABC News Wednesday night, joining other grief-stricken parents quoted in US media as saying they urged police to act more forcefully, as America’s worst school shooting in a decade unfolded.

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‘The situation could’ve been over quick if they had better tactical training, and we as a community witnessed it firsthand,’ said Cazares.

Daniel Myers and his wife Matilda — both local pastors — told AFP they were at the scene, and saw parents growing frantic as police appeared to wait on reinforcements before entering the school.

‘Parents were desperate,’ said Daniel Myers, 72. ‘They were ready to go in. One family member, he says: ‘I was in the military, just give me a gun, I’ll go in. I’m not going to hesitate. I’ll go in.”

‘So there was desperation there, there was time lapse,’ he told AFP at a makeshift memorial outside the school, where wooden crosses have been erected with victims’ names.

The tight-knit Latino community was changed forever when an 18-year-old with a history of being bullied entered the school with an assault rifle and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.

The shooting rampage began at 11am when Ramos shot his grandmother dead. At 11.15am, he sent a message to a girl in Germany telling her he was on his way to 'shoot an elementary school'. He crashed his truck at 11.30am and made his way to the school with one AR-15 rifle. At 11.32am, he bypassed at least one cop at the school entrance. He got inside, barricaded himself in a classroom and managed to stay there for up to an hour - terrorizing kids - before he was finally gunned down

The shooting rampage began at 11am when Ramos shot his grandmother dead. At 11.15am, he sent a message to a girl in Germany telling her he was on his way to ‘shoot an elementary school’. He crashed his truck at 11.30am and made his way to the school with one AR-15 rifle. At 11.32am, he bypassed at least one cop at the school entrance. He got inside, barricaded himself in a classroom and managed to stay there for up to an hour – terrorizing kids – before he was finally gunned down

Cops hold down a parent outside the school, while others wait in anguish for news of if their kids were murdered

Cops hold down a parent outside the school, while others wait in anguish for news of if their kids were murdered

Cops hold down a parent outside the school, left, while others wait in anguish for news of if their kids were murdered, right

A woman is seen on Tuesday being turned back by law enforcement officers outside the school in Uvalde, Texas. Some were heard screaming at the police to get inside the building. It was unclear when the footage was taken, and if the crime scene was still active

A woman is seen on Tuesday being turned back by law enforcement officers outside the school in Uvalde, Texas. Some were heard screaming at the police to get inside the building. It was unclear when the footage was taken, and if the crime scene was still active

Officials say the gunman, Salvador Ramos, wearing a military-style vest, was confronted by a school resource officer, but was able to enter through a back door. Ramos then made his way to two adjoining classrooms and started shooting.

Texas Department of Public Safety director Steven McCraw told CNN Ramos was inside for about 40 minutes before police managed to shoot and kill him.

US Border Patrol chief Raul Ortiz, meanwhile, said the force’s agents ‘didn’t hesitate.’

‘They came up with a plan. They entered that classroom and they took care of the situation as quickly as they possibly could,’ Ortiz told CNN.

Speaking out for the first time, Ramos’s mother Adriana Reyes told ABC News her son could be aggressive when he got really angry but was ‘not a monster.’

‘I had an uneasy feeling sometimes, like ‘what are you up to?,” she told ABC Wednesday evening.

‘We all have a rage, that some people have it more than others,’ Reyes said.

Reyes expressed sympathy for the slain children and their parents, saying she was not aware that her son had been buying weapons.

‘Those kids… I have no words,’ Reyes said through tears. ‘I don’t know what to say about those poor kids.’

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A teacher who was in the school building and spoke to NBC on condition she not be named said she had not been able to eat since the tragedy.

She said her students were watching a Disney movie to celebrate the imminent end of the school year, when she heard gunfire down the hall. She told the kids to get under their desks and rushed to lock the door.

‘They knew this wasn’t a drill,’ the teacher said, referring to the so-called active shooter exercises sadly common in US schools. ‘We knew we had to be quiet or else we were going to give ourselves away.’

Eventually police broke her classroom windows from the outside and helped the kids to safety.

Authorities have said Ramos shot his 66-year-old grandmother in the face before heading to Robb Elementary School with an AR-15 rifle.

According to Uvalde’s justice of the peace Eulalio Dia, anguished families waiting for news of their children had to provide DNA samples to help in the identification process.

‘Some of the children were not in good shape,’ Diaz told the El Paso Times.

Pressed Wednesday on how the teen was able to obtain the murder weapon, Texas Governor Greg Abbott brushed aside suggestions tougher gun laws were needed in his state — where attachment to the right to bear arms runs deep.

But in the shooting’s wake President Joe Biden — who will head to Uvalde in coming days — has called on lawmakers to take on America’s powerful gun lobby and enact ‘common sense gun reforms.’

The Uvalde shooting was the deadliest since 20 elementary-age children and six staff were killed at the Sandy Hook school in Newtown, Connecticut in 2012.

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