Secret Service Makes Telling Move as Trump Returns to Site of Near Assassination, Proving They Lied to America

Former President Donald Trump held⁢ a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, marking his first return‌ since surviving⁣ an assassination attempt on July 13. Attendees gathered to support him,⁤ reflecting on the‍ tragic outcome of that day, where one supporter, firefighter Corey Comperatore, was killed while ⁣Trump escaped unharmed. Videos from the rally raised concerns ⁣about the Secret Service’s⁢ security measures during the July incident,⁢ particularly regarding their decision not to station agents on the building’s sloped roof, from ‌which the shooter fired. Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle had previously defended this choice, citing safety concerns related ‍to​ the sloped roof. However, at the recent rally, records ‌showed snipers positioned on a similar sloped roof, contradicting her earlier statements and prompting calls for accountability. Cheatle resigned shortly after the incident, amidst increasing scrutiny and doubts​ about‍ her claims regarding security protocols.


Former President Donald Trump returned to the site of his near-assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania on Saturday to hold a much-anticipated rally for supporters.

This marks the first time Trump has returned to Butler since would-be assassin Thomas Matthew Crooks shot him on July 13. Though Trump escaped with his life, one rally-goer — firefighter Corey Comperatore — did not.

Videos from Saturday’s rally highlight the Secret Service’s July 13 security failures, especially those showing exactly where it has chosen to station Secret Service counter snipers this time.

Immediately following the July 13 shooting, questions over the security failure began to pop up.

Perhaps the most pressing of these was over why the Secret Service did not secure the rooftop Crooks opened fire from.

In a July 15 interview, then-Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle told ABC News that no Secret Service agents were posted up on the roof because it was sloped.

“That building in particular has a sloped roof, at its highest point. And so, there’s a safety factor that would be considered there that we wouldn’t want to put somebody up on a sloped roof,” Cheatle said.

“And so, the decision was made to secure the building, from inside.”

On Saturday, Secret Service officials appear to have decided Cheatle was wrong about “sloped” roofs posing a security concern.

Videos from the rally show snipers stationed on the sloped roof of a metal sheet building much like the one Crooks had shot from.

This is far from the first time Cheatle’s “sloped roof” security claim was called into question.

In July, the House Oversight and Accountability Committee grilled Cheatle over the claim.

“Do you remember in an ABC interview you did that you didn’t have people on the roof of the AGR building because you were worried about safety because of the slope?” Texas Republican Rep. Pat Fallon asked.

After Cheatle acknowledged she had, Fallon asked if there was a written Secret Service policy regarding sloped roofs, to which she said there was not.

Cheatle later resigned on July 23, ten days after Trump was shot.




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