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US senate panel finds Secret Service failures before Trump rally shooting were ‘preventable’

Democrats and Republicans have disagreed on whether to give the Secret Service more money in the wake of its failures

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Donald Trump is surrounded by Secret Service agents at a campaign rally in Butler, after he is shot at. Photo: AP
Multiple Secret Service failures ahead of the July rally for former president Donald Trump where a gunman opened fire were “foreseeable, preventable, and directly related to the events resulting in the assassination attempt that day,” according to a bipartisan Senate investigation released on Wednesday.
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Similar to the agency’s internal investigation and an ongoing bipartisan House probe, the interim report from the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee found multiple failures on almost every level ahead of the Butler, Pennsylvania shooting, including in planning, communications, security and allocation of resources.

“The consequences of those failures were dire,” said Michigan Senator Gary Peters, the Democratic chairman of the Homeland panel.

Police snipers return fire after shots were fired when Donald Trump spoke at a campaign event in Butler. Photo: AP
Police snipers return fire after shots were fired when Donald Trump spoke at a campaign event in Butler. Photo: AP

Investigators found that there was no clear chain of command among the Secret Service and other security agencies and no plan for coverage of the building where the shooter climbed up to fire the shots. Officials were operating on multiple, separate radio channels, leading to missed communications, and an inexperienced drone operator was stuck on a help line after his equipment was not working correctly.

Communications among security officials were a “multi-step game of telephone,” Peters said.

The report found the Secret Service was notified about an individual on the roof of the building around two minutes before shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks opened fire, firing eight rounds in Trump’s direction less than 150 yards from where the former president was speaking. Trump, the 2024 Republican presidential nominee, was struck in the ear by a bullet or a bullet fragment in the assassination attempt, one rallygoer was killed and two others were injured before the gunman was killed by a Secret Service counter-sniper.

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Around 22 seconds before Crooks fired, the report found, a local officer sent a radio alert that there was an armed individual on the building. But that information was not relayed to key Secret Service personnel who were interviewed by Senate investigators.

A tent at a Trump campaign rally shows a video monitor after he was the target of an assassination attempt. Photo: AP
A tent at a Trump campaign rally shows a video monitor after he was the target of an assassination attempt. Photo: AP
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