New Information About The Assassination Attempt Emerges

3 months ago
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According to members of Congress who were briefed by law enforcement, a counter sniper flagged a suspicious man using a rangefinder to the US Secret Service approximately 20 minutes before a gunman opened fire at a Donald Trump rally. Following closed briefings on Wednesday for lawmakers, a more precise timeline of the events leading up to the attempted assassination has begun to emerge. According to the briefings, local police had spotted the gunman, who was acting strangely, at the Pennsylvania rally on Saturday about an hour before the shooting. They lost him in the crowd before the countersniper found him again. Why Trump's assailant wasn't stopped sooner and why the former president was allowed to appear on the rally stage have been raised by the new information. The 20-year-old suspect in the shooting, Thomas Matthew Crooks, was reportedly spotted early by local police, who noted that he was a thin young man who was acting suspiciously. They used radio to inform other police departments, including the Secret Service. Crooks did not appear to have a weapon at the time. Then they stopped following him. Due to the fact that he also carried a backpack and a range finder, he was recognized as a suspect character. And this was more than an hour before the shooting, Fox News was informed by Wyoming Senator John Barrasso, who was at the briefings. "So, you would think that you shouldn't lose sight of the individual over that hour," Later, at 17:45 local time, Crooks was spotted once more by a counter-sniper officer in the vicinity of the Agr International building, which the gunman later scaled up to shoot Trump. CBS News, the BBC's news partner, reports that the officer radioed to a command post to report the sighting after taking a picture of the gunman through the rangefinder. CBS reported that the Secret Service was informed by 17:52, 19 minutes before the shooting, that Crooks had been spotted with a rangefinder and that other officers on the scene had been informed. An instrument that can assist in measuring the distance to a target is called a rangefinder. An official with knowledge of the briefing told CBS that the gunman had searched his phone for signs of a depressive disorder prior to the attempted assassination and had visited the Butler County fairgrounds at least once in the days leading up to it. The aggressor had likewise utilized his telephone to look for pictures of both Donald Trump and President Joe Biden. On the call, FBI Director Wray informed lawmakers that 14,000 images had been reviewed and that more than 200 interviews had already been conducted.

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