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Secret Service Head Says He ‘Cannot Defend’ Security Lapses at Trump Shooting

Secret Service Head Says He ‘Cannot Defend’ Security Lapses at Trump Shooting

Acting U.S. Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr. testifies before a joint hearing of the Senate Judiciary and Homeland Security and Government Affairs committees on Capitol Hill on July 30, 2024. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Rowe Refutes Claims Secret Service Skipped Meeting With Local Officers

47 days ago
Acting Secret Service Director Rowe said that, despite claims to the contrary, Secret Service personnel did meet with the Butler Emergency Services Unit (ESU) to discuss security on the day of the rally.
“Our personnel met with the team lead from Butler ESU and they discussed areas of concern, areas of responsibility, and that did in fact happen at the site on that day,” Mr. Rowe said.
Jason Woods, the Butler team leader, told ABC News that his team expected to have a briefing after Secret Service arrived on-site, but “that never happened.”
“We had no communication,” Mr. Woods told the outlet. “Not until after the shooting.”

Rowe: Not True that Trump Secret Service Transferred to First Lady

47 days ago


Contrary to reports, members of former President Donald Trump’s Secret Service detail were not transferred to First Lady Jill Biden, said acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe during a joint Senate hearing Tuesday.

“There was one airport agent that actually went on the manpower request for the Trump detail,” said Mr. Rowe. “They handled the arrival at the airport.”

Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs ranking member Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), Homeland Security Committee Chairman Gary Peters (D-Mich.) and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) hold a joint hearing on Capitol Hill on July 30, 2024. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs ranking member Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), Homeland Security Committee Chairman Gary Peters (D-Mich.) and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) hold a joint hearing on Capitol Hill on July 30, 2024. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Rowe Doesn’t Know if Law Enforcement Was Supposed to Be on Roof

47 days ago
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) asked Acting Secret Service Director Rowe if he knew whether law enforcement, local or otherwise, were supposed to be stationed on the roof that the suspected shooter perched on.
Mr. Hawley indicated that a whistleblower had informed him that was the case but the officers abandoned their post “because it was too hot.”
“I do not know that to be a fact,” Mr. Rowe replied.
Asked why he didn’t know, the acting director said the Secret Service was looking into it.
“They should have been on that roof, and the fact that they were in the building is something that I’m still trying to understand,” Mr. Rowe said.

Acting Secret Service Director: ‘I Will Not Rush to Judgment’

47 days ago


During a joint hearing with the Senate Homeland Security and Judiciary Committees, Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) asked why no one at the Secret Service has been fired over the security failure at the July 13 Trump campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

In a heated exchange with Mr. Hawley, acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe said he “will not rush to judgment” to terminate agents who were working the rally.

Mr. Hawley expressed frustration that Mr. Rowe said he did not know whether there should have been law enforcement on the roof where the would-be assassin was located.

“What more do you investigate … to know that they were critical enough failures that some individuals ought to be held accountable?” asked Mr. Hawley.

“Sir, this could have been our Texas School Book Depository, I have lost sleep over that for the last 17 days,” Mr. Rowe responded, making reference to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

Sen. Rick Scott Questions Officials’ Lack of Press Conferences After Shooting

48 days ago
Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) voiced his confusion as to why the Secret Service and the FBI have not held more press conferences in the wake of the assassination attempt.
“I think you guys should’ve been doing all along at least once-a-day press conferences,” Mr. Scott told Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr.
Mr. Rowe responded that he attended the hearing to provide answers to the public’s most pressing questions.
“And we are moving towards doing more frequent releases of information, and we are willing to do that press conference,” he said. “And once we get through this hearing today, we are going to, in all likelihood, do one this week.”
FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate also responded by noting that the FBI held a media engagement—“not a stand-up type press conference”—on Monday. He added that the FBI had “literally provided everything through media and journalists” and congressional hearings.
Mr. Scott, however, said there is value in going before the press at a traditional press conference.
“I completely disagree with your approach,” he said.

‘Connectivity Challenge’ Responsible for Lack of Working Drones: Rowe

48 days ago
Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr. said internet connectivity problems meant law enforcement was unable to use drones to help secure the event.
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), citing a closed-door briefing with Mr. Rowe, noted that members were informed that “cellular bandwidth problems” had rendered law enforcement’s drones inoperable until around 5:20 p.m.
Asked why the Secret Service was depending on local cell networks for security, Mr. Rowe advised that was a question he had “struggled with” as well.
“I have no explanation for it,” he said, adding that the what-ifs have haunted him.
“People fly drones all the time, on the peripheries of our sites. And we go out and we talk to them and we ascertain what their intentions are,” Mr. Rowe said. “On this day in particular, because of the connectivity challenge, as you noted, there was a delay.”
Thomas Matthew Crooks, the suspected shooter, was still able to operate his own drone at around 3:51 p.m., according to investigators. Asked by Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) to explain why that was, Mr. Rowe reiterated that he had no explanation.

Deputy FBI Director: Shooter Likely Had Rifle in Backpack

48 days ago


The would-be assassin at the July 13 Trump rally likely had a rifle in his backpack, said Deputy FBI Director Paul Abbate during a joint hearing of the Senate Homeland Security and Judiciary Committees.

Mr. Abbate said it's possible the shooter “broke the rifle down,” though “we don't have conclusive evidence of that, and took it out of the bag on the roof in those moments before and reassembled it there.”

“There's dashcam footage from a police vehicle that shows him briefly traversing the roof with the backpack in front of him," Mr. Abbate said.

“And then it's just minutes after that, that he's actually seen by the officer who I described with the rifle on the roof.”

Secret Service Announces Platform for Communication Between Law Enforcement Agencies

48 days ago


A “common operating platform” for law enforcement agencies to communicate with Secret Service will be created, said acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr. during a joint hearing of the Senate Homeland Security and Judiciary Committees.

The initiative was announced following the inability for direct communication between Secret Service and state and local law enforcement at the July 13 campaign rally held by former President Donald Trump, who survived an assassination attempt.

Acting Secret Service Director Shows Visuals of Rooftop

48 days ago


During a joint hearing of the Senate Homeland Security and Judiciary Committees, acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr. showed visuals of the rooftop of where the would-be assassin was situated when he tried to kill former President Donald Trump on July 13.

The first visual showed the rooftop of the AGR International warehouse at the rally site in Butler, Pennsylvania, and where the shooter fired his weapon. The second was a reenactment by a Secret Service agent of the shooter on the rooftop that included a five-inch rise where “the assailant would have had to present” his weapon in order to fire it.

The third visual showed the rooftop from where the counter-sniper team was located.

“I cannot understand why there was not better coverage or at least somebody looking at that roofline when that's where they were posted,” Mr. Rowe Jr. said.

US Secret Service Acting Director Ronald Rowe, Jr. (2nd R), and FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate show a photo of the shooter's position as they testify during a US Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and Senate Judiciary joint committee hearing on the security failures leading to the assassination attempt on former US President Donald Trump, at the US Capitol on July 30, 2024. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images)

US Secret Service Acting Director Ronald Rowe, Jr. (2nd R), and FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate show a photo of the shooter's position as they testify during a US Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and Senate Judiciary joint committee hearing on the security failures leading to the assassination attempt on former US President Donald Trump, at the US Capitol on July 30, 2024. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images)

Secret Service: Liable Agents Will be Held Accountable

48 days ago


Agents that are found to be at fault for not preventing the assassination attempt of former President Trump on July 13 will be held accountable, said Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr.

“If this investigation reveals that Secret Service employees violated agency protocols, those employees will be held accountable to our disciplinary process,” said Mr. Rowe during a joint hearing of the Senate Homeland Security and Judiciary Committees.

This process could include being terminated.

Mr. Rowe took over the Secret Service following the July 23 resignation of Kimberly Cheatle.

FBI Deputy Director Reveals Social Media Possibly Tied to Shooter

48 days ago


A social media account that contains anti-Semitic and anti-immigration rhetoric might belong to the man who shot former President Donald Trump on July 13, according to FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate.

“Something just very recently uncovered that I want to share is a social media account, which is believed to be associated with this with the shooter,” Mr. Abbate said during a joint hearing of the Senate Homeland Security and Judiciary Committees.

“In about the 2019–2020 timeframe there were over 700 comments posted from this account. Some of these comments, if ultimately attributable to the shooter, appear to reflect anti-Semitic and anti-immigration themes to espouse political violence and are described as extreme in nature,” he said.

FBI Deputy Director Shares Timeline Leading up to Assassination Attempt

48 days ago
FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate provided a complete timeline of events leading up to the moment former President Donald Trump was shot by a would-be assassin.
According to the FBI, Thomas Matthew Crooks, the suspected shooter, registered to attend the former president’s Pennsylvania rally on July 6—three days after it was announced. That same day, he performed an online search for details surrounding President John F. Kennedy’s assassination.
The next day, on July 7, Mr. Crooks visited the rally site in Butler for about 20 minutes, allegedly for “reconnaissance” purposes. On July 12, he visited Clairton Sportsmen’s Club, a local shooting range, where he returned the next morning—the day of the rally—to practice shooting.
At 10 a.m. on July 13, Mr. Crooks visited the rally site again for about 70 minutes before returning home at around 1:30 p.m. There, his father gave him a rifle, thinking he was returning to the gun range.
About 25 minutes later, Mr. Crooks purchased ammunition on his way back to the Butler Farm Show grounds. By 3:51 p.m., he was back at the rally site, flying a drone overhead, roughly 200 yards from the stage. He operated the drone for about 11 minutes.
At 4:26 p.m., Mr. Crooks was first spotted by local law enforcement. He was again seen at 5:10 p.m. and identified as a “suspicious” person. Four minutes later, a local SWAT operative took a photo of him, and at 5:32 p.m., Mr. Crooks was observed next to the AGR building, “using his phone browsing news sites and with a rangefinder.”
The SWAT operative who photographed Mr. Crooks texted the picture to his fellow operatives at 5:38 p.m., and at around 5:46 p.m., Secret Service command was notified about a suspicious person.
Officers lost sight of Mr. Crooks from 6:02 p.m. to 6:08 p.m., “but continued to communicate with each other in an attempt to locate him.”
Mr. Abbate noted that recently obtained footage from a local business shows that Mr. Crooks hoisted himself up onto the roof of the AGR Building at around 6:06 p.m. before law enforcement spotted him there at 6:08 p.m.
“At approximately 6:11 p.m., a local police officer was lifted to the roof by another officer, saw the shooter, and radioed that he was armed with ‘quite a long gun.’ Within approximately the next 30 seconds, the shots were fired,” Mr. Abbate said.

Acting Director: Secret Service, Trump’s Security Detail Didn't Know About Armed Man on Roof

48 days ago


Neither the Secret Service nor former President Trump’s security detail knew there was a man with a rifle on a nearby roof at the July 13 rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, according to Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr.

“I am prepared to provide an overview of the security planning leading up to and during the July 13 attack,” he said in his opening statement before a joint hearing of the Senate Homeland Security and Judiciary Committees.

“However, I would like to point out that based on what I know right now, Neither the Secret Service counter-sniper teams, nor members of the former president's security detail had any knowledge that there was a man on the roof” of the AGR International warehouse.

Mr. Rowe expressed regret that the Secret Service did not share information with Congress “with greater frequency.”

He noted that the Secret Service sniper that took out the shooter had the authority to fire without approval from above—contrary to what he called conspiracy theories claiming otherwise.

US Secret Service Acting Director Ronald Rowe, Jr. (L), and FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate are sworn in before testifying during a US Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and Senate Judiciary joint committee-hearing on the security failures leading to the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump, at the U.S. Capitol on July 30, 2024. (Roberto Schimdt/<br/>AFP via Getty Images)

US Secret Service Acting Director Ronald Rowe, Jr. (L), and FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate are sworn in before testifying during a US Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and Senate Judiciary joint committee-hearing on the security failures leading to the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump, at the U.S. Capitol on July 30, 2024. (Roberto Schimdt/<br/>AFP via Getty Images)

Acting Secret Service Director: ‘I Cannot Defend’ Security Lapses at Trump Rally Site

48 days ago
Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr. said shame was his primary feeling upon visiting the site where former President Donald Trump was nearly assassinated.
“What I saw made me ashamed. As a career law enforcement officer and a 25-year veteran with the Secret Service, I cannot defend why that roof was not better secured,” Mr. Rowe testified at the joint hearing of the Senate Judiciary and Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committees.
Mr. Rowe was promoted from his previous role of deputy director to replace former Director Kimberly Cheatle following her resignation last week. In the time since, he said he has stepped up security protocols for events such as the former president’s rally, including directing the use of drones to help detect potential threats, maximizing security personnel, and ensuring the expeditious approval of protective detail requests.

New Secret Service Director Announces Changes in Wake of Trump Assassination Attempt

New Secret Service Director Announces Changes in Wake of Trump Assassination Attempt

Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump is covered by Secret Service agents at a campaign rally in Butler, Pa., on July 13, 2024. (Evan Vucci/AP Photo)

Zachary Stieber
Zachary Stieber

Last Updated:

The Secret Service is making changes in the wake of the failed assassination attempt against former President Donald Trump, the agency’s new acting director announced on July 30.
Acting Director Ronald Rowe Jr. said he had traveled to the site of the July 13 rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, where the former president was shot, allegedly by a man who fired from the roof of a nearby building.
Mr. Rowe said what he saw while lying in a prone position on the roof of that building made him feel “ashamed.”
“As a career law enforcement officer, and a 25-year veteran with the Secret Service, I cannot defend why that roof was not better secured,” he told two U.S. Senate committees on Capitol Hill.
“To prevent similar lapses from occurring in the future, I directed our personnel to ensure every event site security plan is thoroughly vetted by multiple experienced supervisors before it is implemented.”
Mr. Rowe said he believed that agents had plenty of time to plan for the rally and called what happened a “failure on multiple levels.”
In addition to former President Trump, whose ear was clipped by one of the bullets fired at him, three others were also struck. Former fire chief Corey Comperatore, 50, was killed while trying to protect his wife and daughter, and the other two shooting victims were hospitalized but have since been discharged.

Internal Investigation

Mr. Rowe assumed the acting director position after Kimberly Cheatle, the presidential appointee who was serving as director, stepped down on July 23 amid calls for her to resign.
Ms. Cheatle, in remarks before Congress before she resigned, said the assassination attempt represented the Secret Service’s “most significant operational failure in decades.”
Echoing that acknowledgment on July 30, Mr. Rowe said he had launched an internal investigation and would hold Secret Service employees accountable if they were found to have violated agency protocols.
“They will be held to our table of penalties, which will include up to termination,” he said.
As of yet, however, no Secret Service employees have been relieved of duty, which Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) questioned.
“Isn’t the fact that a former president was shot, that a good American is dead, that other Americans were critically wounded—isn’t that enough mission failure for you to say that the person who decided that that building should not be in the security perimeter probably ought to be stepped down?” Mr. Hawley asked during one particularly heated exchange.
Mr. Rowe replied that he would prefer to allow the investigation to play out before taking that kind of action.
“I will not rush to judgment,” the acting director said, vowing to hold employees accountable “with integrity.”
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) agreed with Mr. Hawley that accountability would likely require more than just an investigation.
“I think we need individual accountability here and people need to be held responsible—in fact, lose their jobs, if necessary—to send a message,” Mr. Graham said.

Security Failings

Lawmakers from both parties said the Secret Service should have secured the rooftop of the nearby building or made sure that other law enforcement officers secured the rooftop.
Snipers spotted the shooter, who was identified by authorities as 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks, 1 hour and 45 minutes before shots were fired, according to texts disclosed this week, but no officers detained the suspicious person, according to officials.
FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate said Mr. Crooks registered to attend the rally on July 6—just three days after it was announced. That same day, he performed a web search to learn how far Lee Harvey Oswald was located from President John F. Kennedy when he assassinated him.
Investigators believe that Mr. Crooks visited the rally site three times over the course of the following week—once on July 7 for planning purposes and then twice on the day of the event. A little more than two hours before he fired his weapon, he flew a drone overhead for 11 minutes—a feat that law enforcement officers were unable to accomplish themselves.
Mr. Rowe attributed that failure to a cellular “connectivity challenge.”
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) asked how it was that the suspected shooter did not appear to have any trouble connecting his own drone to the internet.
Mr. Rowe said that he had “no explanation.”
As for how Mr. Crooks managed to bring a rifle onto the site undetected, Mr. Abbate said he may have broken the rifle down and stowed it in his backpack.
“We don’t have conclusive evidence of that,” he said.
One reported failure that Mr. Rowe refuted was the claim that the Secret Service did not meet with local law enforcement prior to the event to discuss security. According to the acting director, agency personnel met with Butler Emergency Services Unit team leader Jason Woods on the day of the event.
“We were supposed to get a face-to-face briefing with the Secret Service members whenever they arrived, and that never happened,” Mr. Woods previously told ABC News.
Mr. Rowe also denied that Secret Service personnel were redirected to secure a nearby event at which First Lady Jill Biden was slated to speak.
“There was one airport agent that actually went on the manpower request for the Trump detail,” he said. “They handled the arrival at the airport.”

Shooter’s Social Media Possibly Identified

One new piece of information revealed at the hearing was that the FBI may have identified one of the suspect’s social media accounts.
The account posted more than 700 comments from 2019 to 2020, although Mr. Abbate said investigators are not certain that it belonged to Mr. Crooks.
“Some of these comments, if ultimately attributable to the shooter, appear to reflect anti-Semitic and anti-immigration themes, to espouse political violence, and are described as extreme in nature,” he said.
Mr. Abbate would not specify which social media platform the comments were made on prior to verifying its connection to Mr. Crooks. Nonetheless, he said the FBI is analyzing the content for insight into the shooter’s motive and mindset at the time of the incident.
Investigators have also identified a Gab account that they believe may be linked to Mr. Crooks.

Moving Forward

Since taking the reins last week, Mr. Rowe said he had already started stepping up Secret Service security protocols to ensure that an incident such as the July 13 shooting would not happen again.
One key change is that the agency will roll out a “common operating platform” to allow local law enforcement a direct communication channel to Secret Service agents on the scene. Many officials have pointed to the breakdown of communications between the forces assigned to secure the president’s event as partially responsible for the shooting.
Mr. Rowe said the Secret Service is also expanding its use of drones “to ensure the people and places we protect are safe.”
He said the agency has already strengthened protection for all protectees and is conducting threat assessments for all of those people. It has also started protecting six new people, including Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), who was recently tapped to be former President Trump’s running mate, and independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., to whom officials had previously denied protection on multiple occasions.
Mr. Rowe also said officials are working to make sure that the agency’s protection of the Democratic National Convention is strong and effective, following the protection of the Republican National Convention.
“I am immensely proud of the selfless dedication of our employees to the mission,“ he said. “Every day, across the globe, the men and women [of the Secret Service] answer the call to protect our nation’s leaders, and the standard is no fail for a reason.”
The FBI, U.S. House of Representatives, and Pennsylvania State Police are also investigating the assassination attempt, as is the Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general.
Jackson Richman contributed to this report.

Sen. Paul: Secret Service Hasn’t Contacted Local Police Since Shooting

48 days ago
Local law enforcement in Butler, Pennsylvania, informed Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) that they have not been contacted by U.S. Secret Service personnel since the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump on July 13.
Mr. Paul, the top Republican on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, traveled with other lawmakers to the scene of the shooting over the weekend.
During that trip, he and his team were alarmed to learn “that no one from Secret Service has talked to them since the shooting,” the senator said.
“I don’t know how an investigation into what failed can be conducted without talking to the officers and agencies who were relied upon to do much of the work.”

Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman: ‘Still Many Unanswered Questions’

48 days ago


In his opening statement, Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Gary Peters (D-Mich.) said there is still more to learn about the security failure surrounding the assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump, the GOP presidential nominee, at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13.

“There are still many unanswered questions,” said Mr. Peters. “We need additional information about the Secret Service’s advanced planning efforts.”

This hearing is being held by the Senate Homeland Security and Judiciary Committees with the witnesses being Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe Jr. and FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate. Mr. Rowe took over the Secret Service after the July 23 resignation of Kimberly Cheatle.

Police Snipers Noticed Trump Shooter Nearly 2 Hours Before Assassination Attempt, Texts Reveal

Police Snipers Noticed Trump Shooter Nearly 2 Hours Before Assassination Attempt, Texts Reveal

Police snipers on a roof after shots were fired while Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump was speaking at a campaign event in Butler, Pa., on Saturday, July 13, 2024. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

Arjun Singh
Arjun Singh

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Police snipers noticed Thomas Matthew Crooks at the site of former President Donald Trump’s July 13 rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, nearly two hours before the assassination attempt on Mr. Trump, newly released text messages reveal.
The assassination attempt—which led to former President Donald Trump’s right ear being grazed by a bullet—is the subject of several official investigations by Congress and the executive branch. On July 29, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) published several text messages sent by a counter-sniper of the Beaver County Sheriff’s Office indicating that he noticed Mr. Crooks acting suspiciously near the rally site at 4:26 p.m., which was an hour and 45 minutes before shots were fired at 6:11 p.m.
“Someone followed our lead and snuck in and parked by our cars just so you know,” wrote the unnamed officer, who was a counter-sniper assigned to the rally, in a text to a messaging group of other local police counter-snipers on duty. “He knows you guys are up there,” the officer writes to the other officers, adding details about Mr. Crooks’s location in a complex of buildings adjacent to the rally site.
At 5:38 p.m., another police counter-sniper, Gregory Nicol, wrote on the same group chat that Mr. Crooks was using a rangefinder to examine the rally site.
“I did see him with a rangefinder looking towards the stage. FYI. If you wanna notify SS snipers to look out,” Mr. Nicol wrote, referring to Secret Service counter-snipers that were positioned close to the former president. He then asks others in the group to “call it in to command and have a uniform[ed officer] check it out.”
“I assumed that there would be somebody coming out to speak with this individual or, you know, find out what was going on,” Mr. Nicol told ABC News in an interview.
At 5:45 p.m., a police officer on the group chat shared pictures taken of Mr. Crooks walking around the AGR Building, which Mr. Crooks eventually climbed upon to shoot at former President Trump. The officer also shared photos of Mr. Crooks’s bicycle, which, at 5:52 p.m., is noted to have been moved from the spot in the photo.
The officers, at that point, indicate they’ve notified their command center about Mr. Crooks. Responding to a question from the command center, relayed by a member of the group, about Mr. Crooks’s “direction of travel,” an officer responds at 6 p.m., “Not sure. He was up against the building. If I had to guess towards the back. Away from the event.”
In reality, Mr. Crooks had managed to get atop the AGR Building to a vantage point about 400 feet from the former president’s podium. He was spotted crawling on the roof with a rifle by rally-goers, who alerted police as they recorded his movements. At 6:11 p.m., Mr. Crooks fired eight shots at former President Trump before he was shot and killed by a Secret Service counter-sniper.
It’s unclear at what point the command center began responding to the information relayed by the counter-snipers.
“We have to assume ... that command did something with it. We don’t know if they did,” said Mike Priolo, another police counter-sniper, told ABC News. “We had no communication with the Secret Service,” lead police counter-sniper Jason Woods told ABC News.
Mr. Grassley’s office also published a minute-by-minute timeline prepared by the Beaver County Sheriff’s Office that detailed what its personnel witnessed. That timeline, however, suggests that Mr. Crooks was “first observed” at 5:10 p.m. instead of 4:26 p.m., which is the timestamp on the text message sent by the unnamed officer.
“Local law enforcement were aware of gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks’ suspicious presence more than 90 minutes before he opened fire,” wrote Mr. Grassley’s office in a summary accompanying the evidence on its website.
“Local law enforcement officers had communicated Crooks’ presence to their federal counterparts ahead of Trump’s appearance on stage,” he added. Grassley previously published helmet-worn camera footage of a Beaver County tactical officer who, after the shooting, climbed atop the building’s roof and examined Mr. Crooks’s body.
The Secret Service has been criticized for not spotting Mr. Crooks as he climbed on the building’s roof. Shortly after the shooting, the agency’s director, Kimberly Cheatle, said that the sloped roof of the building complex prompted safety concerns that discouraged agents from being placed there. Ms. Cheatle resigned from her position on July 23 amid bipartisan criticism of her leadership.
Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi told The Epoch Times, “We are committed to better understanding what happened before, during, and after the assassination attempt of former President Trump to ensure that never happens again.”

House Leaders Name Members of Trump Assassination Task Force

House Leaders Name Members of Trump Assassination Task Force

Republican presidential candidate, former President Donald Trump pumps his fist as he is rushed offstage during a rally in Butler, Pa., on July 13, 2024. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Zachary Stieber
Zachary Stieber

Last Updated:

Military veterans and former prosecutors are among the members of a special U.S. House of Representatives task force that plans to probe the attempt to assassinate former President Donald Trump.
Rep. Mark Green (R-Tenn.), a former U.S. Army major and and emergency room physician; Rep. Michael Waltz (R-Fla.) who served in the U.S. Army Special Forces; and Rep. Glenn Ivey (D-Md.), a former prosecutor, are three of the members tapped by House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) to serve on the body, the leaders announced on July 29.
The House unanimously voted on July 24 to approve a resolution to create the task force, but the members were not known until Monday.
The seven Republican members also include Rep. Mike Kelly (R-Pa.), a businessman; Rep. Dave Joyce (R-Ohio), a former county prosecutor; Rep. Laurel Lee (R-Fla.), a former federal prosecutor and state judge; Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.), a former U.S. Army staff sergeant and police officer; and Rep. Pat Fallon (R-Texas), a former U.S. Air Force officer.
Along with Mr. Ivey, the Democrats on the committee are Rep. Jason Crow (D-Colo.), a former U.S. Army Ranger; Rep. Lou Correa (D-Calif.), a longtime lawmaker; Rep. Madeleine Dean (D-Pa.), a lawyer and former teacher; Rep. Chrissy Houlahan (D-Pa.), a former U.S. Air Force officer; and Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.), the onetime director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management.
The task force will have the ability to issue subpoenas as it investigates the July 13 assassination attempt against former President Trump, which occurred in Butler, Pennsylvania. The task force must produce a report on the assassination attempt by Dec. 13. The task force has also been directed to recommend how Congress can take legislative steps to prevent future assassination attempts.
Mr. Johnson and Mr. Jeffries in a joint statement said the task force will “move quickly to find the facts, ensure accountability, and make certain such failures never happen again.”
Officials have said Thomas Crooks, who they identified as the shooter, should not have been able to get a clear view of the former president from a building approximately 430 feet from where he was speaking during the outdoor rally. Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle, who resigned on July 23, said on the day prior that the shooting was the agency’s “most significant operational failure in decades.”
The FBI is also investigating the assassination attempt with help from the Pennsylvania State Police, while the Secret Service is conducting an internal probe and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general is investigating what happened.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has also named members to a panel to finish an independent review of actions taken by federal, state, and local authorities before, during, and after the rally.
Members include Janey Napolitano, a former secretary of homeland security; Frances Townsend, a former federal homeland security official, and David Mitchell, former superintendent of the Maryland State Police.

Trump to Sit for Voluntary Interview With FBI in Assassination Investigation

Trump to Sit for Voluntary Interview With FBI in Assassination Investigation

Former President Donald Trump leaves after speaking during the first rally since the assassination attempt and officially accepting the presidential nomination, in Grand Rapids, Mich., on July 20, 2024. (Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times)

Chase Smith
Chase Smith

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Former President Donald Trump will sit for a voluntary interview with the FBI regarding the probe into the assassination attempt against him at a campaign rally earlier this month, according to a special agent.
“We want to get his perspective on what he observed,” Kevin Rojek, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s Pittsburgh field office, said in a call with reporters on July 29.
While the agency said it hasn’t yet determined the motive of the would-be Trump assassin, his actions showed extensive planning ahead of the July 13 rally, Mr. Rojek told reporters.
Mr. Rojek said interviews with victims are common practice during investigations.
Several new details were revealed during the call, including that the 20-year-old suspect, Thomas Matthew Crooks, had made “significant efforts” to conceal his actions, according to CNN.
Mr. Robek said that Mr. Crooks had conducted extensive online research, which showed that he had an interest in mass shootings, power plants, improvised explosive devices, and the attempted assassination of Slovakia’s prime minister earlier this year.
The suspect was a reclusive individual primarily connected to his family, Mr. Rojek said. His parents have cooperated fully with the investigation and have maintained that they were unaware of his plans.
Mr. Rojek revealed on the call that Mr. Crooks used aliases and foreign-based encrypted email accounts to evade detection during the purchase of firearms and chemical precursors for explosive devices, according to CNN.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Trump Assassination Attempt: An Updated Timeline

Trump Assassination Attempt: An Updated Timeline

An aerial view of the Butler Farm Show, where former President Donald Trump was shot during his campaign rally on July 13, in Butler, Pa., on July 15, 2024. (Gene J. Puskar/AP Photo)

Zachary Stieber
Zachary Stieber

Last Updated:

Around two weeks after the failed attempt on former President Donald Trump’s life, new details are emerging about the shooting and the days leading up to it.
The perpetrator, Thomas Matthew Crooks, who authorities say acted alone, was fatally shot within seconds of opening fire.
According to FBI Director Christopher Wray, at least 700 FBI agents are involved in the investigation into the matter—the first attempted assassination of a U.S. president in more than four decades. Two other reviews into the Secret Service’s security failure are ongoing.
While these investigations are underway, a clearer image of the incident has come into focus—though many questions, including the shooter’s motives, remain unanswered.
New details were disclosed in testimonies to Congress in the week of July 22 by Mr. Wray, former Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle, and Pennsylvania State Police Commissioner Col. Christopher Paris.
So far, more than 100 interviews have been conducted, and more than 1,000 pieces of evidence have been cataloged, according to Col. Paris.
Here’s a breakdown of what we know about the attempted assassination so far.

July 3

The Trump campaign announces a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

July 6

Mr. Crooks searches online for upcoming events being held by former President Trump and the Democratic National Committee, according to Rep. Melanie Stansbury (D-N.M.), who cites briefings from law enforcement officials.
Mr. Crooks searches on the internet for how far away Lee Harvey Oswald was from President John F. Kennedy when Oswald shot the president.
“That’s a search that’s obviously significant in terms of his state of mind,” Mr. Wray told the House Judiciary Committee.
Mr. Crooks registers for the Butler rally on July 6.

July 6

Mr. Crooks visits the site of the rally for the first time, a week before the shooting.
“I think, a week before, he spent roughly 20 minutes there,” Mr. Wray testified.

July 12

The day before the shooting, Mr. Crooks goes to a shooting range, where he practices with a rifle.
Mr. Wray said that investigators have not yet confirmed that the “AR-style” rifle was the same one he used in the shooting, but said that the current assessment is that “it probably is.”

July 13

Morning—Mr. Crooks Returns to Rally Site
On the morning of the rally, Mr. Crooks returns to the site of the rally and spends around 70 minutes there. It was the second of his three visits to the site, according to Mr. Wray.

1:30 p.m.—Crooks Buys Ammunition

Mr. Crooks purchases around 50 rounds of ammunition for the rifle he uses in the assassination attempt.
Mr. Wray said that the FBI has learned this purchase took place at around 1:30 p.m. ET, approximately 5 hours before the shooting.
Mr. Crooks had legally purchased the rifle from his father.

3:50 p.m.—Drone Flown

About two hours before the shooting, Mr. Crooks flies a drone to survey the rally site. He operates it about 200 yards from the stage where former President Trump plans to speak.
The drone, Mr. Wray said, afforded the gunman a “rearview mirror” of the scene behind him and a better assessment of the angle toward the podium.
The FBI has recovered the drone.

5:10 p.m.—Sniper Notices Crooks

Approximately an hour before the shooting, Mr. Crooks is identified by a local law enforcement sniper, according to a report by Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.).
This sniper is one of two posted inside the American Glass Research (AGR) building, the same building from which Mr. Crooks fires an hour later.
The sniper who notices Mr. Crooks doesn’t immediately report it.
In her testimony, former Secret Service Director Cheatle said that the rally was allowed to proceed because Mr. Crooks was deemed as suspicious but not as a threat.

5:14 p.m.—Mr. Crooks Photographed

Law enforcement officers take pictures of Mr. Crooks around 5:14 p.m., according to Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.).
According to body camera footage taken in the immediate aftermath of the shooting, a Beaver County sniper caught images of Mr. Crooks arriving via bicycle.
Local officers notice Mr. Crooks has a rangefinder, a device used to calculate distances for firearms, a little less than an hour before shots are fired.
Mr. Crooks is not yet considered a threat by the Secret Service, and isn’t until moments before the shooting.

5:38 p.m.—Crooks Reported to Command

The local law enforcement sniper who had initially noticed Mr. Crooks at 5:10 p.m. reports it in to command roughly 28 minutes later, at 5:38 p.m., according to Mr. Johnson.
Col. Paris said local officers deem Mr. Crooks suspicious because he is “milling around that area in front of the AGR building” but not entering the rally venue.
At the time, the officer is asked to report it to the Butler emergency services command center, which is in charge of distributing communications.
Notably, according to Mr. Johnson’s report, communications were siloed by agency, limiting communication between local and state police and the Secret Service. This means that the local sniper is unable to immediately communicate it to the Secret Service.
Col. Paris said multiple people were identified as suspicious at the rally.

5:41 p.m.—Command Made Aware of Crooks

Three minutes later, the law enforcement command center in Butler is made aware of Mr. Crooks by the sniper who initially noticed him, Mr. Johnson’s report says.

5:49 p.m.—Pictures of Crooks Distributed

Nine minutes after he makes the initial report to the command center, the sniper sends photos of Mr. Crooks to command, which are then distributed.

Around 5:51 p.m.—Secret Service Alerted

Pennsylvania State Police alerts the Secret Service to a man with a rangefinder at around the same time, Col. Paris told lawmakers on July 23.
Snipers stationed in a building overlooking the roof of the nearby AGR building leave their post to look for Mr. Crooks around the same time, Col. Paris said.
Mr. Crooks could have and should have been apprehended around this timeCol. Paris says at the hearing.
“I would say Mr. Crooks could have been encountered and intercepted. That would have been the ideal,” Col. Paris said.
Ms. Cheatle said in her testimony that rangefinders, which can offer a zoomed-in image to users, aren’t prohibited items and carrying one wasn’t enough on its own to label Mr. Crooks a threat.

5:55—Command Confirms Receipt of Photos

The Butler command center confirms receipt of the photos of Mr. Crooks from the sniper and says the sniper’s concerns are relayed to other security groups.

6:02 p.m. —Trump Takes the Stage

Former President Trump takes the stage to his usual intro, with “God Bless the USA” playing in the background.

6:06 p.m.—Agents Told of Issue

Around four minutes after former President Trump takes the stage, Secret Service agents are alerted to “an issue being worked at the 3 o’clock of the president,” according to Ms. Cheatle.

Sometime Before 6:09 p.m.—Crooks Climbs on Roof

Mr. Crooks has taken a position on the roof sometime before 6:09 p.m., at which point video verifies that he had scaled the building.
Mr. Crooks “climbed onto the roof using some mechanical equipment on the ground and vertical piping on the side of the AGR building,” Mr. Wray said.
The FBI discovered later that Mr. Crooks had previously purchased a ladder, though Mr. Wray said that the FBI does not believe that he used this ladder to scale the building, as no ladder was found at the scene of the incident.

6:09 p.m.—Onlookers Notice Gunman on Roof

About two minutes before the first shot rings out, onlookers outside the rally are captured on video pointing out the shooter while yelling to law enforcement.
“Look, they’re all pointing,” one says.
“Yeah, someone’s on top of the roof,” another says.
The video zooms in on the shooter: “Yeah, he’s right there, you see him? He’s laying down; you see him?”
“Officer!” one shouts.
“He’s on the roof!” one woman says, sounding exasperated. “Right here, right on the roof.”

6:10 p.m.—Counter Snipers Notified

Approximately 90 seconds before the shooting, Secret Service snipers are notified about Mr. Crooks’s position on the roof.
Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) mentioned this during a July 24 hearing, citing briefings from law enforcement officials.

6:11 p.m.—Suspicious Person Deemed a Threat

Mr. Crooks is deemed a threat after being labeled “suspicious” up to this point, Ms. Cheatle told lawmakers on July 22.
In her testimony, Ms. Cheatle reported that Mr. Crooks was only deemed a threat “seconds before the gunfire started.”

Seconds Before Shooting—Officer Sees Gunman

Moments before the shooting, a police officer with Butler Township notices Mr. Crooks and attempts to approach him by climbing onto the roof.
As the officer grabs onto the roof’s ledge to get on the roof, the shooter turns and aims his gun at the officer.
The officer lets go of the ledge, retreats, and reports the threat via radio.

6:11:18 p.m.—Trump Speaks

Former President Trump is on stage discussing illegal immigration.

6:11:31—Trump Turns Head

Former President Trump turns his head, glancing at a chart of immigration data displayed on jumbotrons set up on either side of the stage.

6:11:32 p.m.—Shots Fired

The first shots are heard on camera right after former President Trump turns his head.
After the first shot rings out, the former president whips his hand to his ear, appears to notice blood, and quickly drops to the ground.
In later comments on the incident, former President Trump said he “knew something was wrong” almost immediately, particularly when he saw the blood.
According to Mr. Wray and Col. Paris, eight shell casings were recovered, indicating that Mr. Crooks fired as many rounds.
Ms. Cheatle reported that the countersniper who neutralized Mr. Crooks fired a single shot.

6:11:36 p.m.—Agents Rush On Stage

Several Secret Service agents rush on to the stage, swarming former President Trump, who was still crouched behind the podium.
Some of the agents’ comments are picked up by the microphone.
“What’re we doing, what’re we doing?” one female agent says. “Where are we going?”

6:12:32 p.m.—Trump Rises

For nearly a full minute, former President Trump remained prone on the stage, his body covered by Secret Service agents.
Two Secret Service personnel carrying military grade rifles take to the stage, scanning the crowd as Secret Service agents determine their next move.
Several agents shout, “Shooter down.”
“Shooter down, are we good to move?” a female agent asks.
“Shooter’s down,” a male agent replies. “We’re good to move.”
At this point, former President Trump begins to slowly stand up, still largely covered by agents. His shirt and hair are disheveled, and streaks of blood run down the right side of his face.
As he stands up, agents continue to shield his body.

6:12:47 p.m.—‘Fight, Fight, Fight!’

As former President Trump stands up, he agents, “Let me get my shoes.”
Moments later, he says, “Wait, wait, wait.”
The former president then raises his fist to the crowd and is seen saying the words, “Fight, fight, fight!”

6:12:55 p.m. —Trump Escorted Out

With most of his body still shielded by agents, former President Trump is carefully escorted off stage as he continues to pump his fist for the crowd.
He is taken by agents to a nearby vehicle, which pulls away.
Former President Trump is taken to Butler Memorial Hospital to receive medical attention, while several patients in the ER pray.
Corey Comperatore, a 50-year-old firefighter is killed during the shooting as he shields his wife and daughter from gunfire. Two other men are seriously wounded, including 74-year-old James Copenhaver, of Moon Township, and 57-year-old David Dutch, of New Kensington.

‘Detonation Device’ Discovered on Shooter’s Body

After the shooting, investigators recover three “relatively crude” explosive devices capable of being detonated remotely, according to Mr. Wray.
In addition, a “detonation device” is discovered on the shooter’s body, according to Col. Paris.
Few other details about the explosive devices have been released.
Aside from the joint investigation being conducted by the FBI and Pennsylvania State Police, the Secret Service plans to issue its own investigation report in about 60 days, according to Ms. Cheatle before she resigned.
The Department of Homeland Security Inspector General’s Office has opened an investigation into the Secret Service’s “process for securing former President Trump’s July 13, 2024 campaign event.”
The House voted unanimously on July 24 to pass a resolution creating a special task force to investigate the attempted assassination.
“We are announcing a House Task Force made up of seven Republicans and six Democrats to thoroughly investigate the matter,” Mr. Johnson and Mr. Jeffries wrote in a joint statement.
“The task force will be empowered with subpoena authority and will move quickly to find the facts, ensure accountability, and make certain such failures never happen again.”
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