A congressional whistleblower said the Secret Service had “few resources” to cover the rally where former President Donald Trump was nearly assassinated in Pennsylvania on July 13 after the NATO summit in Washington, DC.
The whistleblower told the House Judiciary Committee that Secret Service Special Agent Tim Burke revealed the oversight during a July 8 meeting with the FBI, the Western Pennsylvania Fusion Center and other law enforcement agencies.
The meeting was held to discuss security needs for President Trump’s fateful event in Butler, Pennsylvania, in addition to another event being held that same day in Pittsburgh by First Lady Jill Biden on behalf of her husband’s campaign.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) Wrote a letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray It announced on Thursday that it would disclose the whistleblower’s information to the committee.
“Police overlooked numerous vulnerabilities before and during the event, allowing an assassin to shoot and kill the president, kill attendees, and seriously injure two more,” Jordan said.
“This tragedy deserves a full and transparent investigation,” he added, emphasizing that FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate had promised an “expedited” investigation with “maximum transparency.”
“We cannot comment at this time on matters related to an ongoing investigation,” Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said in a statement.
“Of course, we are committed to cooperating with any appropriate and proper investigations into what happened on July 13th, including with Congress, the inspector general, and both our own internal and independent investigations,” he added.
Suspect Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, opened fire at the Butler Farm Show grounds at least 10 minutes after being deemed a “threat” to the 45th president, law enforcement officials told The Washington Post on Wednesday.
Representatives and senators were informed of the warning during a briefing with FBI and Secret Service officials on Wednesday, and that Crooks had been marked as a “suspicious individual” more than an hour before he shot Trump eight times in the right ear and killed rally-goer Corey Comperatore.
Two other people were injured.
Butler’s local police anti-sniper unit was stationed inside the AGR International manufacturing building but for some reason missed the fact that Crooks had set up a sniper position on the roof just 130 yards away, in a clear line of sight to Trump.
Another Butler Township officer confronted Crooks just before he opened fire, but backed away and fell off the roof when the would-be assassin turned and pointed an AR-style semi-automatic assault rifle at him.
Residents living near the rally also told The Washington Post that they had never received any contact from police about deploying security ahead of the election campaign.
Photos taken nearby showed that the gate to the facility had only been secured shut with a zip tie, allowing the shooter easy entry.
Guglielmi told The Washington Post that the bureau’s embattled director, Kimberly Cheatle, has no plans to resign, despite growing calls for her to do so from House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana) and others in the wake of the massive security failures.
“Continuity of operations is paramount during any significant incident, and Director of the U.S. Secret Service Kimberly Cheatle has no intention of resigning,” Guglielmi said.
“She has deep respect for members of Congress and is committed to leading the Secret Service with transparency through its internal investigations and strengthening the agency through lessons learned in these important internal and external investigations,” he added.
The former officers were also infuriated by Cheatle’s evasion that officers were not guarding the factory roof while Trump was speaking.
“That building in particular has a sloped roof on the highest part, so, you know, for safety reasons, you don’t want to put people on a sloped roof,” she admitted in an explosive interview with ABC News.
“So the decision was made to protect the building from the inside,” she said.
Wray is scheduled to testify at a committee hearing on July 24.
