
Trump shooting task force unveils bombshell final report on 'preventable' assassination attempt By KATELYN CARALLE, SENIOR U.S. POLITICAL REPORTER IN WASHINGTON, D.C. Published: 15:44 EST, 10 December 2024 | Updated: 16:32 EST, 10 December 2024 e-mail 21 View comments The House Assassination task force released its final and longawait report on Tuesday. The 180-page report claims the deadly shooting at Donald Trump 's Butler, Pennsylvania rally on July 13 was 'preventable and should not have happened.' It was released just days after its final public meeting last week where Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe got into a screaming match with Rep. Pat Fallon (R-Texas). Rowe did acknowledge at the hearing the agency's 'abject failure' in the July shooting. The 13-member panel was created by a House vote shortly after the first assassination attempt over the summer. And a few months later they were asked to also look into the second incident. The group concluded that there was no single failure that allowed shooter Thomas Matthew Crooks to fire at Trump, but 'various' decisions and moments that created an ideal situation for the assassination attempt. The Task Force on the Attempted Assassination of Donald Trump released a series of recommendations it feels will help prevent future incidents. Members of the task force visited both sites where men tried to take out the former – and now future – president. The House Assassination Task Force released its final report on the two attempts on Donald Trump's life The task force said it conducted 46 interviews and reviewed 18,000 pages of documents. Crooks, who was 20 when he was shot dead by a Secret Service counter sniper, killed one rally goer, injured two others and was able to strike Trump in the right ear before he was neutralized by the former president's protective detail. '[T]he former President—and everyone at the campaign event—were exposed to grave danger,' the committee wrote. 'Conversely, the events that transpired on September 15, 2024, in West Palm Beach, Florida, demonstrated how properly executed protective measures can foil an attempted assassination,' they added. The bipartisan task force was created to investigate the July 13 attack that came just centimeters away from ending Trump's life. But when a second assassination plot was foiled just two months later on September 15, the panel was also asked to include that incident in its probe. While Crooks was able to get just several hundred feet in range of Trump with a rifle and discharge several shots , Ryan Wesley Routh, 58, didn't even fire a shot before a Secret Service agent opened fire in his direction. Routh was posted outside Trump's West Palm Beach golf course in the shrubs when he pointed the barrel of his firearm through the fencing and bush. An agent surveying the green a few holes ahead of the then-2024 presidential candidate spotted the scope and fired in the direction of the threat. Routh fled the scene but was captured shortly after and taken into custody. His firearm, backpacks with bulletproof materials and a GoPro camera were recovered from where he was camping out since the middle of the night. The Assassination Task Force said the second incident was an example of what should be done by the Secret Service to best guard their protectees. While the first assassination attempt was used as an example of how a series of failures can lead to a deadly situation. Read More BREAKING NEWS Republican lawmaker EXPLODES at Secret Service boss The report comes just days after their final hearing, which devolved as Rep. Fallon got into a fiery back-and-forth with Acting Director Rowe. An impassioned shouting match broke out after Fallon struck a nerve when he pressed Rowe about security measures in place to protect Trump, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris at the September 11 remembrance this year. It led to a bitter argument between the two men at the hearing on Thursday, which was supposed to be focused on the security failures surrounding Trump's protective detail. But the conversation turned to what Fallon considered to be another Secret Service security problem two months after the first attempt – and just days before the second. Fallon said the agent in charge of the detail should have been stationed physically closer to Trump, Biden and Harris when they all attended a 9/11 commemoration event at Ground Zero. When asked about why the SAIC was out of range, Rowe insisted that he and other members of the detail were just outside of view of the image Fallon had blown up to exhibit at the hearing. Rep. Pat Fallon (R-Texas) got into a heated screaming match with U.S. Secret Service Acting Director Ronald Rowe during the final House Assassination Task Force hearing 'Do not invoke 9/11 for political purposes, congressman,' Rowe yelled at Fallon over a barrage of cross-shouting after the lawmaker displayed an image of the Acting Director at the Ground Zero service this year 'That is the day that we remember the more than 3,000 people that have died on 9/11,' Rowe said, starting to raise his voice. 'I actually responded to Ground Zero. I was there going through the ashes of the World Trade Center,' he went on. When Fallon tried to cut in, Rowe did not back down, causing the congressman to begin shouting. 'I'm not asking you that. I'm asking you, were you the special agent in charge?! You were not,' Fallon charged. 'Do not invoke 9/11 for political purposes, congressman!' Rowe was heard yelling over a barrage of cross-shouting. 'I'm trying to ask a question. Don't try to bully me!' Fallon screamed and pointed at the witness. 'You are out of line, congressman!' Rowe fired back. 'Way out of line.' Pennsylvania Texas Thomas Matthew Crooks Share or comment on this article: Trump shooting task force unveils bombshell final report on 'preventable' assassination attempt e-mail Add comment7 ejected late in Heat's comeback win over Rockets
None
Getafe 2, Valladolid 0 Valencia vs. Betis, 8 a.m. Atletico vs. Alaves, 10:15 a.m. Las Palmas vs. Mallorca, 12:30 p.m. Girona vs. Espanyol, 12:30 p.m. Celta Vigo vs. Barcelona, 3 p.m. Osasuna vs. Villarreal, 8 a.m. Sevilla vs. Rayo Vallecano, 10:15 a.m. Leganes vs. Madrid, 12:30 p.m. Athletic Bilbao vs. Sociedad, 3 p.m. Mallorca vs. Valencia, 3 p.m. Barcelona vs. Las Palmas, 8 a.m. Alaves vs. Leganes, 10:15 a.m. Espanyol vs. Celta Vigo, 12:30 p.m. Valladolid vs. Atletico, 3 p.m. Villarreal vs. Girona, 8 a.m. Madrid vs. Getafe, 10:15 a.m. Rayo Vallecano vs. Athletic Bilbao, 12:30 p.m. Sociedad vs. Betis, 3 p.m. Sevilla vs. Osasuna, 3 p.m. Mallorca vs. Barcelona, 1 p.m. Eibar 2, Racing Club de Ferrol 0 CD Castellon 1, Mirandes 3 Club Deportivo Eldense 2, Albacete Balompie 0 Racing Santander 2, Burgos CF 0 Levante 1, Elche 1 Gijon 1, Granada 2 Cadiz 2, Cordoba 0 Oviedo 3, Tenerife 1 Almeria 2, Deportivo 1 FC Cartagena 1, Huesca 0 Zaragoza 0, Malaga 0 Club Deportivo Eldense 2, Huesca 1 Racing Club de Ferrol 0, Levante 0 FC Cartagena vs. Almeria, 8 a.m. Granada vs. Cadiz, 10:15 a.m. Burgos CF vs. Eibar, 12:30 p.m. Cordoba vs. Zaragoza, 12:30 p.m. Malaga vs. Racing Santander, 3 p.m. Albacete Balompie vs. Tenerife, 8 a.m. Deportivo vs. Gijon, 10:15 a.m. Mirandes vs. Club Deportivo Eldense, 10:15 a.m. Huesca vs. CD Castellon, 12:30 p.m. Elche vs. Oviedo, 3 p.m. Almeria vs. Cordoba, 2:30 p.m. Levante vs. Malaga, 1 p.m. CD Castellon vs. Racing Club de Ferrol, 1 p.m. Oviedo vs. Huesca, 2:30 p.m. Almeria vs. Granada, 10:15 a.m. Zaragoza vs. Albacete Balompie, 10:15 a.m. Cadiz vs. Deportivo, 12:30 p.m. Racing Santander vs. Mirandes, 12:30 p.m. Tenerife vs. Elche, 3 p.m. CD Castellon vs. Malaga, 8 a.m. Club Deportivo Eldense vs. Racing Club de Ferrol, 12:30 p.m. Levante vs. Burgos CF, 12:30 p.m. Gijon vs. Cordoba, 3 p.m. Eibar vs. FC Cartagena, 2:30 p.m.Vladimir Putin and Rajnath Singh (R) NEW DELHI: India's expansive strategic partnership with Russia was reinforced on Tuesday, with defence minister Rajnath Singh telling President Vladimir Putin that their "friendship is higher than the highest mountain and deeper than the deepest ocean", while the two countries also inked a wide-ranging protocol on defence cooperation in "ongoing and prospective areas". In his almost-hour-long meeting with Putin at the Kremlin, Singh also stressed that India "has always stood by its Russian friends and will continue to do so in the future", underlining the fine balance India has struck between Russia and the US-led western countries even during the ongoing Ukraine war. However, there were several concerns raised by the Indian delegation during the 21st India-Russia Inter-Governmental Commission on Military Military-Technical Cooperation (IRIGC-M&MTC) meeting, which was co-chaired by Singh and his Russian counterpart Andrey Belousov. Sources said New Delhi asked Moscow to speed up deliveries of the two remaining squadrons of the S-400 Triumf air defence missile systems as well as set up a repair and overhaul facility for them in India, while also ensuring timely deliveries, maintenance support and supply of spares for several other weapon systems and platforms, ranging from Sukhoi-30MKI fighters to T-90S main-battle tanks. Moscow was also asked to give more transfer of technology to improve the "maintenance and sustenance" of the IAF's existing fleet of 259 Sukhoi jets, the bulk of them produced by HAL under licence from Russia for over $12 billion. With Singh asking Russian defence industries to "explore new opportunities" to enhance their participation in 'Make in India' projects, Belousov said the operationalisation of the military technical cooperation agreement for 2021-31 would give the necessary impetus to such endeavours. Dubbing the joint production of AK-203 assault rifles at the Korwa ordnance factory in UP a "resounding success", Singh told Belousov that Russia must expand the production of such products in India and explore exporting them to other countries, the sources said. Russia still remains India's main weapons supplier, accounting for over 36% of its arms imports, though New Delhi has been focussing on enhancing its own domestic defence production. India has also increasingly turned to countries like the US, France and Israel for military hardware and software over the last two decades. Around 60% of Indian military's inventory is still of Russian-origin, including fighters like Sukhoi-30MKIs and MiG-29s, warships like aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya, Talwar and Teg-class frigates and Kilo-class diesel-electric submarines, AN-32 medium-lift aircraft and Mi-17 helicopters. Stay updated with the latest news on Times of India . Don't miss daily games like Crossword , Sudoku , and Mini Crossword .
Should the Philippines open its doors to foreign universities?