Trump camp questions why they weren’t alerted of suspicious person prior to assassination attempt
Fox News
Former president Trump's team has questioned why they were not notified that local police was tracking a suspicious person at his July 13 rally.
The head of Pennsylvania State Police told a congressional committee last week that at least 20 minutes before Crooks shot at the former president, local countersnipers observed him acting strangely, took his photograph and sent it to a command center with state troopers and Secret Service agents.
According to the Washington Post, members of the Secret Service detail that protects Trump and were with him backstage have raised concerns with others in the Secret Service that they were never informed that Crooks was being tracked.
They also said they were not told that the local countersnipers eventually lost track of Crooks, or that another local officer, who was stationed on the roof of a building just outside the security perimeter of the rally, noticed Crooks perched with a gun.
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