On 13 July, Donald Trump rally in Pennsylvania was interrupted by shots fired by 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks. Trump was injured in the ear and evacuated from the stage. Shots fired from the roof of the building next to the rally. The attacker was shot by Secret Service agents.
The national Bureau of Investigation is investigating a failed Trump assassination. As a consequence of events in Pennsylvania, 1 individual was killed and 2 were injured.
On Thursday, the AFP news agency, citing FBI manager Chris Wray, reported that there were any doubts whether Donald Trump had been shot or not. scratched Teleprompter shrapnel. Wray testified Wednesday before the home of Representatives Justice committee in the U.S. Congress.
The Bullet for Democracy
Donald Trump, at his first rally after the bombing that took place in Michigan on Saturday, stated that he “received a bullet for democracy.”
I was shot with a bullet that pierced the advanced right ear. I immediately knew something was wrong, I heard a whistling, shots, and I immediately felt the bullet pierce the skin. There was quite a few bleeding and then I realized what was going on. – Trump wrote a fewer hours after the social media event.
Trump about Secret Service
Whether it was a bullet or not, the erstwhile president of the Secret Service said it was not working. During the conversation on tv Fox News Trump said safety services should have put a sniper on the roof. According to him, an officer like that could place an attacker from a close building in time and neutralize the threat.
The biggest mistake that the Secret Service made on July 13th, erstwhile the effort to assassinate me was to let me go on stage. Secret Service are large people, but this event is simply a flaw in their reputation. – he said.
Ten days after these events, on July 23, the head of the Secret Service Kimberly Cheatle resigned.
On July 13, we failed. The assassination of erstwhile president Donald Trump is the biggest operational failure of the Secret Service in decades – said Cheatle testifying before the home of Representatives' Supervisory Committee.












