NewsNation

The Plot to Kill Trump: What we know and what comes next

(NewsNation) — Former President Donald Trump was the target of an assassination attempt at a Pennsylvania rally on July 13.

The FBI said that the attempted assassin was Thomas Crooks, a 20-year-old Pennsylvania man. The Secret Service shot and killed him seconds after Trump was shot. The attack was the most serious attempt to assassinate a president or presidential candidate since Ronald Reagan was shot in 1981.


Here’s what we know about the assassination attempt. You can watch the full report in the player above.

The Trump Assassination Investigation

The law enforcement failures didn’t just begin on July 13, the day of Donald Trump’s now infamous rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. They began weeks before, with what sources say, was a flawed plan by the United States Secret Service (USSS).

A source tells NewsNation the building that the gunman climbed atop to shoot the former president was supposed to be secured by local police. There was even a star on the plan, explicitly indicating it was the local police department that was responsible for securing the building — despite it being so close to where the president was speaking.

Sources say the USSS did not show up for the final planning meeting and their perimeter at the event was too small.

The Butler Township Police Department is small, with only 12 full-time officers amid a staffing shortage. NewsNation has learned a lieutenant is in charge following the chief’s retirement.

Sources close to the police department say they initially expected a department their size would be doing traffic and were surprised to learn that they would be in charge of securing the building along with a special local sniper team.

Concerns over security staffing at the Trump rally

Staffing concerns have come up again and again.

The Trump campaign had asked for additional USSS resources in the past. NewsNation has learned that on the day of the rally, the USSS requested an additional police unit outside the building. Butler Township says one was not available.

A source tells NewsNation that on the day of the rally, local police officers were inside the building and not keeping an eye on the roof.

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Both federal and local sources agree local officers were on the roof briefly, but because of the heat, moved down to the ground. Another team of local officers was surveilling the building from the inside through a window.

Sources have told NewsNation from the beginning that there was a massive communication failure.

It may, however, be worse than previously realized.

The House Committee on Homeland Security says they’ve discovered that the USSS and local police were not able to talk to each other on their radios.

“Normally, they put a person from the locals in the Secret Service area,” said U.S. Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah. “Today, the locals shared with us they were not allowed to have anyone in there. As far as radio communications, there was very little communication between the outer and inner perimeter.”

It appears it was rally attendees who spotted the gunman before police.

“A minute or two before the shooting, I saw a guy in a grey shirt climbing up the building beside us. I tried to alert cops. And then saw a rife slinging over his shoulder,” witness Jean Vincent said.

So why didn’t the Secret Service snipers take out the gunman before he started firing?

NewsNation obtained the below photo, with a time stamp of 6:04 p.m., seven minutes before the shooting. Snipers are seen looking in the direction of the gunman.

NewsNation also obtained a photo from 5:41 p.m. that shows snipers looking at the roof. Sources within the USSS say their current working theory is the sniper did not initially shoot Thomas Crooks because the sniper thought Crooks was a police officer on the roof.

This could stand to reason, given that the original security plan indicated local police were supposed to secure the roof.

Still, many warning signs were missed.

Body camera video after the shooting shows the confusion on the roof where the Secret Service and local police talk near the deceased gunman.

A congressional source who was briefed on the matter tells NewsNation that the shooter visited the rally site a few days prior to scope it out.

Crooks initially set off a metal detector at the rally because he had a range finder. The congressional source says 62 minutes elapsed between the time the shooter was photographed as being suspicious and when he fired the shots. Twenty minutes elapsed between the time snipers spotted him and when he fired the shots.

The Secret Service director says they were told about a suspicious person two to five times before the shooting but had no indication he had a weapon.

U.S. Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle resigned under pressure this week and acknowledged her agency failed in carrying out its plan to keep the former president safe.

The Gunman: Thomas Crooks

There is much we still do not know about the shooter but investigators are finding clues in his internet searches.

We know he had pictures on his phone of former President Trump, President Joe Biden and other officials including Attorney General Merrick Garland and FBI Director Christopher Wray. Investigators say he looked up the dates for the Democratic National Convention in Chicago along with Trump’s appearances.

There is still no clear motive of exactly why he wanted to kill Trump.

We are, however, getting a closer look at what may have led up that shooting. FBI Director Wray revealed disturbing new information about the suspected gunman.

The FBI said the attempted assassin at President Donald Trump’s rally was a 20-year-old man named Thomas Matthew Crooks. Secret Service shot and killed Crooks seconds after Trump was shot.

“On July 6, he did a Google search for, ‘How far away was Oswald from Kennedy,’” said Wray, referencing the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas.

Wray told Congress that July 6, the day of that Google search, is the same day Crooks registered for the Butler, Pennsylvania, rally where he shot former president Trump and three others in the crowd.

“He was interested in public figures and, I think this is important, starting around July 6 or so, he became very focused on former president Trump and his rally.”

That focus turned into recognizance missions as he would go on to visit the fairgrounds six days before the rally.

Crooks, 20, worked at a nursing home where he washed dishes and served. He had no criminal record.

He bought the ammo for the assault rifle from a local gun store on the day of the shooting. Remote control devices attached to homemade bombs were found in his car but the bombs were left in the “off” position.

“We’ve recovered three devices, two in his vehicle and one back in his residence,” Wray told Congress. “I would say these are relatively crude devices but they did have the ability to be detonated remotely. There were receivers for those two devices with the devices and then on the shooter himself when he was killed by law enforcement he had a transmitter with him.”

A senior congressional source told NewsNation that Crooks had a “major depressive disorder diagnosis,” also known as clinical depression, a condition affecting 21 million U.S. adults, according to the 2021 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. His high school classmates say he was a “loner” and was ridiculed for the way he dressed.

“He was bullied,” a classmate told NewsNation. “He was bullied so much. You never think this would happen to you. But this is happening to me. I live here and this is happening. It’s so insane. You never know what the world is coming to these days.”

Wray described Crooks’ list of contacts as more limited than what one would expect and believes that he acted alone.

“So far — underline so far — we have not found any evidence of any co-conspirators, foreign or domestic.”

Full Timeline of the Trump Assassination Attempt on July 13

Earlier in the day, July 13

Around 5 p.m.

Around 5:20 p.m.

Around 5:40 p.m.

6:02 p.m.

Around 6:09 p.m.

6:11 p.m.

About one minute after the shooter is hit

About two minutes after the shots

6:50 p.m.

8:42 p.m.

About 12:10 a.m., July 14