The Western Journal

Classmate of Thomas Matthew Crooks reveals warning signs before attack, denies severe bullying

The article discusses the background of Thomas Crooks, the man who attempted to kill former President Donald⁢ Trump at a ⁢rally. It describes Crooks as‍ having a contemptuous attitude towards Trump ​based on a‍ conversation⁢ with a former classmate. The classmate​ recalled Crooks as⁣ being arrogant and opinionated, especially about politics. Crooks was also associated with a group of friends ⁢who made threats to shoot up their school. Despite his behavior, the article mentions that not many people knew about Crooks’ intentions and questions why warning signs were⁤ not noticed, especially given that his parents were counselors. The article‌ suggests ⁤that there were red flags that should​ have been addressed before the⁣ attempted ‍attack on Trump.


A former high school classmate of Thomas Crooks said the young man who tried to kill former President Donald Trump showed contempt for Trump years before Saturday’s rally.

“I brought up the fact that I’m Hispanic and, you know, I’m for Trump. And he said, ‘Well, you’re Hispanic, so shouldn’t you hate Trump?’” Vincent Taormina told Fox News  Tuesday.

“And I was like, no. He’s great. He’s a great president. He called me stupid – or insinuated that I was, like, well, that’s kinda stupid.”

He said Crooks was “a know-it-all.”

Taormina said their discussion about Trump took place in 2016.

“He just did not like politicians, especially with the choices that we had,” Taormina said.

“He did not like our politicians,” he said.

Taormina said Crooks was only silent when he felt like being so.

“If he was passionate about something, he would just talk, talk, talk and act like he knew everything, especially politics related, and he would say it in a tone that was like, ‘I’m better than you,’ in a type of way,” Taormina said.

Crooks was “real smug, arrogant, whenever he was talking. And whether that was his way to try to make friends or be funny, I don’t know, but it got under my skin a lot,” he said.

Taormina called the friends who hung out with Crooks “out there.”

“Some of them didn’t even show up to school. Some of them went home school,” he said.

“They were definitely the type, and they did, make threats to shoot up our school,” he said.

He said the incident happened his freshman year in high school.

He recalled “everyone going through Snapchat, like everybody’s texting, everybody, you know, saying this or that.”

“Everybody was saying it was Thomas who made the threat and it was that friend group. Everyone was mainly blaming the friend group, but a name that kept coming up was Thomas. And he never did anything, you know what I mean? He left school for a couple of days. It wasn’t anything like a suspension or anything. It was just a couple of days, you know,” he said.

He pushed back against the media narrative of Crooks as suffering in high school.

“He was not severely bullied. Almost nobody knew,” he said.

Taormina said someone should have known what Crooks was planning.

“The signs were there,” he said.

“Somebody should have known, because he was not a loner,” he said. “And both of his parents being counselors, how do you not see that warning sign?”

“Everybody, anybody who knew him … should have seen something, should have known something was up” he said. “And I know it’s kind of easy to hide, but people are going to get their affairs in order before they do something this bold and this drastic, and nobody saw it. And why?”






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