Whistleblowers Release SHOCKING New Evidence In Trump Assassination Attempt

Daily Report September 04,2024

Whistleblowers have told Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) that Department of Homeland Security agents with minimal protective training and experience were assigned to protect former President Donald Trump during an assassination attempt at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania on July 9.

That  shocking information was revealed by the Republican senator in an interview on “Jesse Watters Primetime” Tuesday night.

“A two-hour, online webinar. And I’m told that half the time, the sounds to the webinar didn’t even work,” Hawley claimed.

“So think about this: The former president of the US … is sent out on stage, most of the people there are not trained, they’re not qualified. They only got a webinar training and even that didn’t work,” he scoffed.

“It is absolutely outrageous.”

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The senator insisted that agents protecting Trump had not been properly prepared for such an event, lamenting on the “characteristics of 30 people who’d never handled a cane in their life and most importantly at least have some idea that there should be something alive about him. He’s still young.” They went through only a webinar training and that didn’t even work,” he scoffed.

Hawley also alleged that the Homeland Security agents had been taken off of high-priority investigations, including child exploitation cases, to work Trump’s protective detail—work they were not trained for.

Some of the biting remarks concerned The Secret Service and FBI for their failure to divulge more particulars about last month’s July 13 rally where Trump barely escaped an assassination attempt by Thomas Matthew Crooks.

“This information only came to light because of whistleblowers,”Hawley told Watters.

Representative Clay Higgins (R-LA) highlighted the presence of a regional SWAT team at the rally as well. “The first shots fired at Crooks came from the SWAT team and ended up damaging his rifle and keeping him from firing any more bullets,” Higgins said.

During the interview, Watters noted acting Secret Service director Ronald Rowe Jr. had not mentioned in his July 31 congressional testimony that local SWAT team members were present at the time of the incident.