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Uvalde fights release of 911 calls, police reports in fiery death of congressional staffer for U.S. Rep. Gonzales

Regina Santos-Aviles died Sept. 14 after catching on fire, according to Uvalde Police

UVALDE, Texas – The City of Uvalde is attempting to block the release of records related to the fiery death of Regina Santos-Aviles, a congressional staffer for U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales.

Santos-Aviles died on Sept. 14 after catching on fire in her backyard alone, the Uvalde Police Department previously confirmed to KSAT Investigates. The agency, which is investigating her death with the Texas Rangers, does not believe anyone else was involved.

KSAT Investigates and several other news agencies have filed records requests for 911 calls, police reports and body camera footage from the incident.

In an Oct. 24 letter sent on behalf of the City of Uvalde to the attorney general’s office, attorney Austin Beck said law enforcement initially investigated the case to see if any charges should be filed.

The investigation, according to Beck, will soon be closed without any criminal charges being filed.

The city is still asking the attorney general’s office to withhold the records under a statute that prevents records from cases that did not result in a conviction or deferred adjudication from being released.

According to the city’s letter, Beck argues that the information involves a person who is not a public figure and would violate common-law privacy rights for Santos-Aviles’ family.

“The fact that the death in the case resulted from self-inflicted injuries, whether accidental or intentional, is already publicly known,” Beck wrote.

The Bexar County Medical Examiner’s Office has yet to determine Santos-Aviles’ cause and manner of death, KSAT Investigates confirmed on Thursday.

“... The information concerns mental/emotional distress, as such information is comprised of highly intimate or embarrassing facts, and the details of which are of no legitimate interest to the public,” Beck wrote.

Javier Guerra, an attorney representing Santos-Aviles’ husband, Adrian Aviles, told KSAT Investigates that Aviles is worried about the release of records related to his wife.

“Nobody needs to see body-cam footage of the officers speaking with her and nobody needs to hear or read what she may have said to them,” Guerra said in an email. “We feel the privacy of Regina and the family should be paramount and that the public has no right to any of this.”

Gonzales, who has been active on his X account, has avoided speaking with local media since his staffer’s death.

Last month, KSAT and other media outlets were uninvited from a San Antonio event he was set to appear at days after Santos-Aviles’ death.

KSAT Investigates has reached out to Gonzales and his communications director, Alyssa Gulick, a combined total of 15 times since Sept. 17. Neither has responded.

Background

Paramedics, firefighters and police responded to Santos-Aviles’ home in Uvalde around 9:30 p.m. Sept. 13 for a disturbance, according to a UPD call sheet.

A close family member said Santos-Aviles, who was the Uvalde Regional District Director, was airlifted to San Antonio to be treated for extensive burns after being found on fire in front of her porch.

Santos-Aviles was pronounced dead just after 6:30 a.m. Sept. 14, the medical examiner’s office said.

In a phone interview with KSAT, family members were adamant that Santos-Aviles’ death was an accident, adding that there was a water hose outside of the home.

“Her last words were, ‘I don’t want to die,’” a family member told KSAT.

Sgt. Rene Cordova with the Texas Rangers told KSAT in September that they are assisting UPD with the investigation, adding that it’s a “procedure thing.”

Cordova denied that the Rangers were called in because Santos-Aviles was a staffer for the congressman.

Uvalde police officials said last month they are waiting for final reports from the Texas DPS Crime Laboratory and the medical examiner’s office, which could take weeks.

The Uvalde Police Department said it would not provide any more details about the investigation until those reports are finalized.

If you have a story tip, reach out to ksatinvestigates@ksat.com.

Read more reporting on the KSAT Investigates page.


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