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Tag: Trump rally

  • Pennsylvania State Police identify 3 victims shot at Trump rally

    Pennsylvania State Police identify 3 victims shot at Trump rally

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    2 injured at Trump rally taken to Pittsburgh hospital


    2 injured at Trump rally taken to Pittsburgh hospital

    01:53

    BUTLER, Pa. (KDKA) — The Pennsylvania State Police have identified three victims who were shot during the assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on Saturday.

    The deceased victim was identified as Corey Comperatore, 50, of Sarver, Pa. 

    The second victim, who was wounded in the shooting, has been identified as 57-year-old David Dutch, of New Kensington, Pa. He is currently listed in stable condition. The third victim, who is also listed in stable condition, was identified as James Copenhaver, 74, of Moon Township, Pa., according to a media release from state police. 

    “These victims and their families are certainly in our thoughts today,” said Colonel Christopher Paris, Pennsylvania State Police Commissioner. “The Pennsylvania State Police continue to work tirelessly alongside our federal, state and local partners as this investigation continues.”

    Gov. Josh Shapiro has ordered United States and Commonwealth flags on all Commonwealth facilities, public buildings, and grounds across the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to fly at half-staff immediately in honor of Comperatore.

    “Corey was the very best of us,” Shapiro said. “Corey died a hero. Corey dove on his family to protect them last night. Corey was a ‘girl dad.’ Corey was a firefighter. Corey went to church every Sunday. Corey loved his community.”

    The gunman was identified as 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks of Bethel Park. The U.S. Secret Service said he was shot and killed by a Secret Service sniper

    Law enforcement has told CBS News that Crooks opened fire with a semiautomatic AR-style rifle and the ATF is currently tracing the weapon.

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  • The Secret Service is investigating how a gunman who shot and injured Trump was able to get so close

    The Secret Service is investigating how a gunman who shot and injured Trump was able to get so close

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    WASHINGTON — The U.S. Secret Service is investigating how a gunman armed with an AR-style rifle was able to get close enough to shoot and injure former President Donald Trump at a rally Saturday in Pennsylvania, a monumental failure of one of the agency’s core duties.

    The gunman, who was killed by Secret Service personnel, fired multiple shots at the stage from an “elevated position outside of the rally venue,” the agency said.

    An Associated Press analysis of more than a dozen videos and photos taken at the Trump rally, as well as satellite imagery of the site, shows the shooter was able to get astonishingly close to the stage where the former president was speaking. A video posted to social media and geolocated by the AP shows the body of a man wearing gray camouflage lying motionless on the roof of a manufacturing plant just north of the Butler Farm Show grounds, where Trump’s rally was held.

    SEE ALSO | Latest on Trump assassination attempt: Live updates

    The roof was less than 150 meters (yards) from where Trump was speaking, a distance from which a decent marksman could reasonably hit a human-sized target. For reference, 150 meters is a distance at which U.S. Army recruits must hit a human-sized silhouette to qualify with the M16 assault rifle in basic training. The AR-style rifle, like that of the gunman at the Trump rally, is the semiautomatic civilian version of the military M16.

    The FBI on Sunday identified the shooter as Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania.

    The Secret Service did not have a speaker at a late-night news conference where FBI and Pennsylvania State Police officials briefed reporters on the shooting investigation. FBI Special Agent in Charge Kevin Rojek said it was “surprising” that the gunman was able to fire at the stage before he was killed.

    Members of the Secret Service’s counter-sniper team and counterassault team were at the rally, according to two law enforcement officials. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss details of the investigation.

    The heavily armed counterassault team, whose Secret Service code name is “Hawkeye,” is responsible for eliminating threats so that other agents can shield and take away the person they are protecting. The counter-sniper team, known by the code name “Hercules,” uses long-range binoculars and is equipped with sniper rifles to deal with long-range threats.

    READ MORE | Man killed at Trump rally was former fire chief who ‘died a hero,’ Pennsylvania governor says

    U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas said his department and the Secret Service are working with law enforcement to investigate the shooting. Maintaining the security of presidential candidates and their campaign events is one of the department’s “most vital priorities,” he said.

    “We condemn this violence in the strongest possible terms and commend the Secret Service for their swift action today,” Mayorkas said. “We are engaged with President Biden, former President Trump and their campaigns, and are taking every possible measure to ensure their safety and security.”

    Calls for an investigation came from all sides.

    Rep. Mark Green, a Tennessee Republican who chairs the House Committee on Homeland Security, sent a letter to Mayorkas on Sunday raising questions about the shooting and demanding information about the former president’s Secret Service protection.

    “The seriousness of this security failure and chilling moment in our nation’s history cannot be understated,” Green wrote in the letter.

    Green also noted reports that the Secret Service had rebuffed requests from the Trump campaign for additional security. A spokesman for the Secret Service, Anthony Guglielmi, said on X Sunday that those allegations were “absolutely false” and that they had added resources and technology as the campaign’s travel increased.

    SEE ALSO | Suspect in Trump assassination attempt had registered as Republican but motive unknown

    Green said he would be talking with Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle on Sunday.

    James Comer, a Kentucky Republican who is the House Oversight Committee chairman, said he contacted the Secret Service for a briefing and called on Cheatle to appear for a hearing. Comer said his committee will send a formal invitation soon.

    “Political violence in all forms is un-American and unacceptable. There are many questions and Americans demand answers,” Comer said in a statement.

    U.S. Rep. Ritchie Torres, a New York Democrat, called for investigating “security failures” at the rally.

    “The federal government must constantly learn from security failures in order to avoid repeating them, especially when those failures have implications for the nation,” Torres said.

    Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, posted on X that he and his staff are in contact with security planning coordinators ahead of the Republican National Convention set to begin Monday in Milwaukee. “We cannot be a country that accepts political violence of any kind – that is not who we are as Americans,” Evers said.

    The FBI said it will lead the investigation into the shooting, working with the Secret Service and local and state law enforcement.

    Attorney General Merrick Garland said the Justice Department “will bring every available resource to bear to this investigation.”

    “My heart is with the former President, those injured, and the family of the spectator killed in this horrific attack,” Garland said in a statement. “We will not tolerate violence of any kind, and violence like this is an attack on our democracy.”

    ___

    Associated Press writers Colleen Long and Zeke Miller in Washington contributed to this report.

    Copyright © 2024 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

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    AP

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  • ‘You’re next:’ Some Trump supporters blame the media for assassination attempt

    ‘You’re next:’ Some Trump supporters blame the media for assassination attempt

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    New York (CNN) — Moments after Donald Trump was rushed to safety following a failed assassination attempt at a Saturday night rally, some of his supporters turned toward the press pen with obscenities as they fingered reporters for blame.

    “This is your fault!” one attendee emphatically yelled, pointing at individual journalists as he approached the fence line separating them from attendees. “This is your fault!”

    “It is your fault!” exclaimed another.

    Axios reporter Sophia Cai, who quoted some in the crowd warning the press, “you’re next” and that their “time is coming,” even reported that a few rally goers tried to breach the barriers establishing the press pen, but that they were stopped by security personnel.

    In the immediate wake of the horrific shooting attempt on Trump’s life, which resulted in the tragic death of one rally attendee and the severe wounding of two others, the news media has quickly emerged among some Trump supporters as a body to assign blame.

    While the Trump campaign urged its staff to “condemn all forms of violence” and said it “will not tolerate dangerous rhetoric on social media,” some of the former president’s supporters in MAGA Media vehemently assailed the press for its hard-knuckled reporting on Trump, which has sounded the alarm on what four more years under the former president would look like.

    Over the course of the campaign cycle, news organizations have, among other things, reported at length on Trump’s plans to warp the federal government for his own ends, including to seek vengeance against his political opponents. That reporting is now facing scrutiny, with some Trump supporters blaming it for producing a charged atmosphere that gave way to the assassination attempt, while mostly looking past the incendiary rhetoric of the former president himself.

    Immediately after the attack, top figures across the news media condemned the shooting, underscoring that violence against a political candidate is an attack on democracy itself. Top liberal commentators also expressed their disgust in strong terms. MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow, the country’s most recognized liberal personality, said she did not “have adequate words to describe how disgusted and horrified” she was.

    “There is no *no* *no* *no* violent solution to any American political conflict,” Maddow wrote on Threads. “I am grateful the former president is going to be ok, and miserably sad and angry about the other people hurt and killed. This is a very dark day.”

    The reaction from the press and liberal media figures stood in stark contrast to how right-wing media personalities have responded in the aftermath of attacks on Democrats. Instead of raising the volume or fanning the flames of false flag conspiracy theories, which top figures on the right have done after attacks on Paul Pelosi and Gabrielle Giffords, they urged for calm.

    Nevertheless, the anti-press attitude in MAGA circles has unquestionably increased. Despite the accuracy of the news media’s reporting on Trump, supporters of the former president have moved to vilify and scapegoat journalists for the heinous attack, sending anti-media attitudes to alarming heights.

    “On a daily basis, MSNBC tells its audience that Trump is a threat to democracy, an authoritarian in waiting, and a would-be dictator if no one stops him,” conservative radio host Erick Erickson wrote on X. “What did they think would happen?”

    Donald Trump Jr. blasted CNN, The Washington Post, and the press at large for recent coverage of his father.

    “Dems and their friends in the media knew exactly what they were doing with the ‘literally Hitler’ bullshit!,” he wrote on X.

    With just over 100 days until the November elections, the inflamed disposition toward the press has prompted cause for concern among news executives and spurred discussion inside newsrooms about safety and security precautions — especially with the Republican National Convention set to start on Monday. That four-day event, which was already a security concern prior to the assassination attempt, will bring together scores of journalists, alongside thousands of Trump supporters.

    “Journalists are always among the very first to run towards a crisis, and we collectively are working in overdrive to keep everyone safe,” one news executive told me. “That is the absolute top priority.”

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    Oliver Darcy and CNN

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  • Trump rally attendees react to shooting:

    Trump rally attendees react to shooting:

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    Eyewitnesses at a rally of former President Donald Trump’s described a chaotic scene on Saturday as he was rushed off stage with blood visible on his face after shots were fired. 

    The Secret Service issued a statement that Trump is safe, while the campaign said the former president is “fine.” Trump said in a social media post that a bullet struck his right ear.

    The gunman is dead after being shot by a Secret Service sniper, law enforcement sources said. One spectator was killed, and two spectators were critically injured, officials said.

    In a statement early Sunday morning, the FBI identified the shooter as 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, which is located just outside Pittsburgh.     

    Reporters on the scene in Butler, Pennsylvania, heard between eight and 10 popping sounds, prompting rallygoers and others to get down and take cover. Secret Service officers immediately swarmed the former president, and blood was visible on the risers to the left of where Trump had been standing.

    Former President Donald Trump is rushed off the stage at a campaign rally
    Former President Donald Trump is rushed off the stage at a campaign rally in Butler, Pa., on July 13, 2024 after witnesses heard shots fired.

    Gene J. Puskar / AP


    An eyewitness told reporters that they heard the former president say “gotta get my shoes” to Secret Service officers as he was ushered off the stage. Trump was taken away in a motorcade and could be seen holding up a fist as he got into the vehicle. 

    Another eyewitness, an emergency room physician, said he saw a man who was shot in the head. 

    “I heard the shots. I thought it was firecrackers to begin with. Somebody over there was screaming ‘he’s been shot, he’s been shot,’ so I made my way over,” the physician, who had blood on his shirt, told reporters. 

    Rally attendee Ben Macer told CBS Pittsburgh that he saw the suspect “move from roof to roof” and told an officer that the gunman “was on the roof.”

    “When I turned around to go back to where I was, it was when the gunshots started, and then it was just chaos, and we all came running away, and that was that,” Macer said. 

    Election 2024 Trump
    A campaign rally site for Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump is empty and littered with debris Saturday, July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pa.

    Evan Vucci / AP


    Crime scene tape was promptly set up following the incident to the left of where Trump had been standing. People attending the rally were escorted out of the vicinity. Witnesses saw a helicopter land within a few minutes.

    David McCormick, the GOP nominee for Senate in Pennsylvania who sat in the front row of the rally on Saturday, told CBS News that he couldn’t determine where the shots were coming from and whether Trump was directly hit. 

    “Clearly it was an attack on — an assault on his life,” McCormick said. 

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  • What we know and don’t know about the shooting at Donald Trump’s rally

    What we know and don’t know about the shooting at Donald Trump’s rally

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    Come on, let me get my shoes. Let me get my shoes. I got, I got you, sir. Let me get my shoes, sir. Hold that in your head buddy. So we gotta move to the pump. Let out, wait, wait, wait, wait now let me see this.

    What we know and don’t know about the shooting at Donald Trump’s rally

    Shots were fired at a campaign rally for former President Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, Saturday evening.Here’s what we know and don’t know so far.What we know Trump’s rally was interrupted after a series of loud noises rang out. Trump went to the ground as Secret Service agents rushed to cover him. Screams could be heard coming from the crowd.Trump appeared to be bleeding from his right ear as he was escorted from the stage. He clutched his ear while going to the ground as the loud bangs were going off.The Butler County, Pennsylvania, district attorney reported that two people have died: a shooter and a rally attendee. Three others were critically injured.The FBI confirmed at an early Sunday morning press conference that the shooting was an assassination attempt on the former president.The shooter was outside the Trump rally and was killed by the Secret Service. Law enforcement recovered an AR-style rifle at the scene of the shooting.The FBI identified Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, “as the subject involved in the assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump,” according to a public affairs specialist with FBI Pittsburgh.Later Saturday night, Trump said on Truth Social, “Nothing is known at this time about the shooter, who is now dead. I was shot with a bullet that pierced the upper part of my right ear… I knew immediately that something was wrong in that I heard a whizzing sound, shots, and immediately felt the bullet ripping through the skin.” President Joe Biden addressed the nation Saturday evening, stating, “Look, there’s no place in America for this kind of violence. It’s sick. It’s sick,” he said. “It’s one of the reasons why we have to unite this country. We cannot be like this. We cannot condone this.”Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas issued a statement Saturday night, “DHS and the Secret Service are working with law enforcement partners to respond to and investigate the shooting. We condemn this violence in the strongest possible terms and commend the Secret Service for their swift action today. We are engaged with President Biden, former President Trump, and their campaigns, and are taking every possible measure to ensure their safety and security” A Secret Service spokesman said, “An incident occurred the evening of July 13 at a Trump rally in Pennsylvania. The Secret Service has implemented protective measures and the former President is safe. This is now an active Secret Service investigation and further information will be released when available.” What we don’t knowThe identity of the victims is not known.The motive of the shooter is not known.The exact location from where the shots took place, though it was reported that it happened outside of the rally.This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

    Here’s what we know and don’t know so far.

    What we know

    • Trump’s rally was interrupted after a series of loud noises rang out. Trump went to the ground as Secret Service agents rushed to cover him. Screams could be heard coming from the crowd.
    • Trump appeared to be bleeding from his right ear as he was escorted from the stage. He clutched his ear while going to the ground as the loud bangs were going off.
    • The Butler County, Pennsylvania, district attorney reported that two people have died: a shooter and a rally attendee. Three others were critically injured.
    • The FBI confirmed at an early Sunday morning press conference that the shooting was an assassination attempt on the former president.
    • The shooter was outside the Trump rally and was killed by the Secret Service.
    • Law enforcement recovered an AR-style rifle at the scene of the shooting.
    • The FBI identified Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, “as the subject involved in the assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump,” according to a public affairs specialist with FBI Pittsburgh.
    • Later Saturday night, Trump said on Truth Social, “Nothing is known at this time about the shooter, who is now dead. I was shot with a bullet that pierced the upper part of my right ear… I knew immediately that something was wrong in that I heard a whizzing sound, shots, and immediately felt the bullet ripping through the skin.”
    • President Joe Biden addressed the nation Saturday evening, stating, “Look, there’s no place in America for this kind of violence. It’s sick. It’s sick,” he said. “It’s one of the reasons why we have to unite this country. We cannot be like this. We cannot condone this.”
    • Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas issued a statement Saturday night, “DHS and the Secret Service are working with law enforcement partners to respond to and investigate the shooting. We condemn this violence in the strongest possible terms and commend the Secret Service for their swift action today. We are engaged with President Biden, former President Trump, and their campaigns, and are taking every possible measure to ensure their safety and security”
    • A Secret Service spokesman said, “An incident occurred the evening of July 13 at a Trump rally in Pennsylvania. The Secret Service has implemented protective measures and the former President is safe. This is now an active Secret Service investigation and further information will be released when available.”

    What we don’t know

    • The identity of the victims is not known.
    • The motive of the shooter is not known.
    • The exact location from where the shots took place, though it was reported that it happened outside of the rally.

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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