As each day passes, it seems that there is something sinister working against President Trump.
As a gunman climbed onto the roof of a warehouse less than 500 feet from where former President Donald Trump was speaking Saturday, three law enforcement snipers were positioned nearby, scanning the crowd for any threats.
Secret Service director Kimberly A. Cheatle said local officers were in the same building as the gunman, suggesting they were practically on top of him. Contradicting this, a local law enforcement official told The New York Times they were actually in an adjacent building. This conflicting information underscores the security breakdown that allowed a 20-year-old with a semiautomatic rifle to open fire, injuring Trump, killing one man, and gravely wounding two others at the rally.
The Secret Service Director Just Threw Local Law Enforcement under the Bus pic.twitter.com/uliDzkMok4
— Papo (@Papo352) July 17, 2024
The fact that this basic detail remains unresolved three days after the shooting reveals emerging divisions among law enforcement agencies. Cheatle ignited the debate in her first public appearance since the attempt, stating that local officers were inside the building used by the gunman, Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania. If true, this meant the gunman could have scaled the building even as snipers were stationed inside it.
“There were local police in that building, responsible for the outer perimeter,” Cheatle said. However, multiple local law enforcement agencies quickly denied this, prompting the Secret Service to assert it valued local law enforcement.
Local officers augment security at events like campaign rallies, but the Secret Service ultimately ensures the protectee’s safety. “The safety and security of a protectee falls on the shoulders of the Secret Service, period,” said John Cohen, a former law enforcement official. “You have a former president who was close to being assassinated. There’s nothing more illustrative of the threat we’re facing.”
This photo of Thomas Matthew Crooks was taken around 5:30 p.m. Sat by a local counter sniper, who sent to law enforcement.
Around 5:45, the same sniper spotted Crooks a second time, now on the roof, and took a second picture and called it into the Secret Service⁉️ pic.twitter.com/FwxdWL6I4Q
— Eddie (@Eddies_X) July 17, 2024
Cheatle admitted, “The buck stops with me. I’m the director of the Secret Service. It was unacceptable, and it’s something that shouldn’t happen again.”
Amid rising threats of political violence, this incident heightens concerns as the 2024 election approaches. U.S. intelligence agencies were tracking a potential Iranian assassination plot against Trump before Saturday’s events, though it was unrelated to Crooks. This intelligence led the Secret Service to boost security for Trump’s rally, yet it failed to stop the attack.
At the center of the security debate is a cluster of warehouses near the rally site at the Butler Farm Show grounds. The gunman used the roof of the closest warehouse to fire his AR-15-type weapon. Local and federal accounts differ on which building was used as a staging area for local officers and snipers. A local official, anonymously, said snipers were in a two-story building behind the gunman’s location.
After the gunman reached the one-story warehouse roof, a local officer climbed the building’s wall, only to confront the gunman and retreat when threatened. Shortly after, the gunman began shooting at the rally, and a Secret Service sniper killed him.
🚨BREAKING: The Parents of Trump Shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks Called Police Hours Before To Report Their Son Had an AR-15 and Was Missing ⚠️
Secret Service was never informed of this, and it just hApPeNeD to be the one building local law enforcement was tAsKeD with guarding… pic.twitter.com/cNpXAmtVWd
— Matt Wallace (@MattWallace888) July 17, 2024
Jim Pasco, executive director of the National Fraternal Order of Police, criticized the narrative of divided responsibilities. “That’s nonsensical,” he said, comparing the Secret Service to a general contractor overseeing the entire security operation.
The Secret Service later clarified on social media that it wasn’t blaming local law enforcement, praising the officers’ bravery. Both agencies agreed that no one was stationed on the roof of the AGR warehouse buildings due to safety concerns about the roof’s slope.
Former agents noted that rooftops, even steep ones, are typically used for surveillance but sometimes access is blocked for safety. “The roof should have been an observation post with police officers on it,” said Joe Funk, a former agent who protected Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton.
Major Points
- Conflicting accounts between Secret Service and local law enforcement on the position of officers during Trump’s rally shooting.
- Cheatle claims local officers were in the same building as the gunman; local officials dispute this.
- Security breakdown allowed the gunman to injure Trump, kill one, and wound two others.
- Rising political violence concerns as 2024 election nears, with unrelated intelligence on a potential Iranian plot against Trump.
- Debate on law enforcement responsibilities and positioning, with calls for improved coordination and accountability.
Lap Fu Ip – Reprinted with permission of Whatfinger News
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