Editor’s note: This is a developing story and will be updated throughout the day.
The Secret Service is under growing pressure to explain what went wrong in the hours and minutes before a gunman opened fire in an attempted assassination on former President Donald Trump at his Pennsylvania rally on Saturday.
One attendee was killed and two were critically injured before a sniper fatally shot 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks on the roof of a building around 400 ft. from the rally stage.
“The Secret Service is working with all involved federal, state and local agencies to understand what happened, how it happened, and how we can prevent an incident like this from ever taking place again,” Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle said in a statement Monday.
The Secret Service is not substantially changing its security plan for the Republican National Convention, which kicks off Monday, Cheatle said, despite the Saturday shooting.
“I am confident in the security plan our Secret Service RNC coordinator and our partners have put in place, which we have reviewed and strengthened in the wake of Saturday’s shooting,” Cheatle said.
United States Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle speaks during a press conference at the Secret Service’s Chicago Field Office on June 4 2024 in Chicago, Illinois, ahead of the 2024 Democratic and Republican National Conventions.
Kamil Krzaczynski | Afp | Getty Images
On Sunday, Secret Service RNC coordinator Audrey Gibson-Cicchino also stood by the convention’s security plan, which she said had been developed over 18 months and given the highest level of security designation.
She added that firearms are not allowed within the convention venue or the Secret Service’s wider security perimeter.
Wisconsin is an open-carry state, however, which means that firearms are allowed just blocks away from the RNC, outside of the Secret Service’s cordoned area.
The Secret Service and other law enforcement agencies have been bombarded with questions about the potential security lapses that could have contributed to the circumstances around Saturday’s shooting.
Republican candidate Donald Trump is seen with blood on his face surrounded by secret service agents as he is taken off the stage at a campaign event at Butler Farm Show Inc. in Butler, Pennsylvania, July 13, 2024.
Rebecca Droke | AFP | Getty Images
House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., on Saturday requested that Cheatle testify at a congressional hearing on Monday, July 22.
“There are many questions and Americans demand answers,” Comer said in a statement Saturday night, just hours after the shooting took place.
Comer was followed by House Homeland Security Committee Chair Mark Green, R-Tenn., who said he would launch his own investigation into how the Secret Service and the Department of Homeland Security coordinated the security procedures.
“The seriousness of this security failure and chilling moment in our nation’s history cannot be understated,” Green wrote in a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on Sunday.
Green’s letter also repeated a rumor that DHS rejected Trump’s requests for additional security resources in the weeks ahead of Saturday’s rally. Both the Secret Service and Mayorkas have staunchly rejected that claim.
“That is an unequivocally false assertion,” Mayorkas said Monday on ABC’s “Good Morning America.” “We had enhanced security for the former president beginning at least in June. We have not received any requests for additional security measures that were rebuffed.”
The Federal Bureau of Investigation is still in the middle of its post-mortem on the Trump rally. On Sunday, FBI officials said they so far believe the gunman acted alone, though they had not yet identified a motive.
President Joe Biden has also directed an independent review in coordination with the FBI’s criminal probe.
“We have committed the full force of the FBI to this investigation,” FBI Director Christopher Wray said on a call with reporters Sunday. “The American people can rest assured that we will leave no stone unturned as we work to get to the bottom of what happened.”