A local police officer noticed Thomas Crooks, the would-be assassin, just moments before he attempted to kill former President Donald Trump but failed to stop him despite the clear danger, according to a report.
After rally attendees saw Crooks on the roof of a manufacturing plant approximately 130 yards from where Trump was speaking just after 6 p.m. Tuesday, they alerted the police. One officer climbed a ladder to investigate, law enforcement officials told The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity.
The officer, whose department had been enlisted by the Secret Service to help with security, encountered Crooks, who pointed an AR-style rifle at them.
The officer then descended the ladder, and Crooks immediately fired about eight shots at the former president, grazing him in the ear, killing one bystander in the crowd, and seriously injuring two others, the source said.
After that volley of shots, Secret Service snipers shot Crooks dead.
Despite the Secret Service’s swift response in neutralizing the shooter, the agency responsible for protecting former and current presidents is facing intense criticism for allowing a gunman to get so close to Trump’s rally.
“This was a catastrophic failure. It should never have been a remote possibility,” former House Oversight Committee chair Jason Chaffet, who led an extensive 2015 investigation into the shortcomings of the Secret Service, told the Washington Post.
“We did all these investigations and did an extensive report so this would never happen again. It’s as if they paid no attention to the bipartisan recommendations,” said Chaffet, whose report focused on how the Secret Service had been spread too thin.
The Secret Service confirmed after the shooting that it heavily relied on local police to help support its security efforts at the rally, including at least six officers from Butler County tactical units supporting the counter-assault team that covered Trump’s evacuation, which only included two officers from the Secret Service, according to the Washington Post.
There were also two Secret Service sniper teams on site, with an additional two staffed by local officers.
“Secret Service always has the lead on securing something like this,” Pennsylvania State Police lieutenant colonel George Bivens told reporters, explaining that local police are routinely enlisted to assist the Secret Service.
“We work with them to provide whatever is requested by the Secret Service, but they’re the lead in that security,” Bivens said.
Current House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky) announced plans to call Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle for a July 22 hearing to investigate the assassination attempt. Some, including Rep. Mike Waltz (R-Fla.), have claimed Trump’s team repeatedly requested but was denied additional Secret Service support long before the shooting.
The Secret Service denied those allegations.
“There’s an untrue assertion that a member of the former President’s team requested additional security resources & that those were rebuffed. This is absolutely false,” Secret Service rep Anthony Guglielmi wrote on X.
“In fact, we added protective resources & technology & capabilities as part of the increased campaign travel tempo,” he added.
Despite those supposed resources, a 20-year-old gunman managed to get within easy striking distance of Trump and seemed to be thwarted merely by a chance turn of the head by the former president.
“How … did he get a gun that close?” a former Secret Service agent told the Washington Post.
“This is bad. Just terrible,” another former agent said. “When the incident occurred, I was baffled when I heard the distance of the shot … How could that happen?”
{Matzav.com}
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