KALAMAZOO, MI -- Twenty-six DVDs of police dashcam videos following the Feb. 20 mass shootings in Kalamazoo were released Monday, May 2, by the Kalamazoo City Attorney's Office.

The footage comes from Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety dashboard cameras as officers responded to the shootings. Other public records, such as police reports, audio from 911 calls and dashcam video from the Kalamazoo County Sheriff's Office from the arrest of the man accused of the shootings, Jason Dalton, were released previously.

The videos released Monday show officers responding to Seelye Kia on Stadium Drive, where Tyler Smith, 17, and his father, Richard Smith, 53, were shot to death while looking at a pickup truck on the lot. Tyler Smith's girlfriend, Alexis Cornish, who called 911 to report the shootings, can be seen talking to officers.

In a police report released earlier, a KDPS officer recounted Cornish telling her how the shooter walked up on the Smiths, said something to them then almost immediately opened fire with several shots from a handgun. Still inside the Smith's Range Rover, she ducked down and waited as the shooter walked by and then left, before grabbing Tyler's cell phone and calling 911. She was able to give police a description of the shooter and his vehicle, a Chevrolet HHR.

Other segments from dashcam video released Monday show the scene in the parking lot of the Cracker Barrel restaurant in Texas Township, where shortly after the shootings at Seelye four women were shot to death and teenager Abigail Kopf was wounded. KDPS video from the traffic stop and arrest of Dalton just over two hours after the Cracker Barrel shootings was also released.

Eariler Feb. 20, Tiana Carruthers was shot at The Meadows townshomes in Richland Township, the first of the three shooting scenes. Dalton faces six counts of murder, two counts of assault with intent to commit murder and eight felony firearm counts.

On April 22, Dalton was found competent for trial with a ruling by Kalamazoo County District Judge Tiffany Ankley, following a mental examination and report by the state Center for Forensic Psychiatry.

Jeff Hadley, chief of the Kalamazoo Department of Public Safety, had no comment Monday about the videos or the pending case. Neither Kalamazoo County Prosecutor Jeff Getting nor Kalamazoo City Attorney Clyde Robinson, whose staff prepared the video for release, were immediately available for comment.

Rosemary Parker is a reporter for MLive. Contact her at rparker3@mlive.com.