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How Secret Service failed again and again to stop Trump assassination attempt: From needing drone tech support to missing chance to warn ex-prez

The US Secret Service agents in charge of Donald Trump’s July 13 rally failed at nearly every opportunity before and during the former president rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, according to a scathing 94-page Senate report on the July 13 sniper attack released Wednesday.

Perhaps no moment is more emblematic than the detail about how a poorly trained Secret Service agent had to called a 1-800 tech support hotline to get support to fly a drone that could have spotted Crooks and his efforts to case the grounds, officials said.

A scathing 94-page Senate report released Wednesday — by the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee and Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations — found a slew of missteps and miscommunications that allowed gunman Thomas Matthew Crooks to wound Trump and two other supporters, and kill fireman Corey Comperatore, 50.

“Multiple foreseeable and preventable planning and operational failures by USSS contributed to [Thomas] Crooks’ ability to carry out the assassination attempt of former President Trump on July 13,” the preliminary report read.

“These included unclear roles and responsibilities, insufficient coordination with state and local law enforcement, the lack of effective communications, and inoperable C-UAS systems, among many others.”

A US Senate committee found the Secret Service failed at several points to prevent the attempted assassination of Donald Trump in July. Getty Images

Inexperienced agent oversees counter-drone operations

The Secret Service agent in charge of flying a counter-drone at the Butler rally ran into technical difficulties, officials found, leading him to rely on a toll-free tech support hotline for help.

The agent admitted that he had less than an hour of training on how to operate the drone, with another agent giving him only a brief rundown before leaving him in charge.

The issue caused the deployment of the counter-drone to be delayed for hours. That gap allowed Crooks to fly a drone of his own to survey the area without being noticed, according to the Senate report.

Officials failed to notify agents covering Trump to rush him off the stage before the shots were fired. Getty Images

Getting Trump off stage ‘did not cross my mind’

Even after agents and law enforcement were made aware of a threat to the former president — they did not act to warn Trump and get him off stage.

“Shortly before shots were fired, a [Secret Service] counter-sniper saw local law enforcement running toward the AGR building [where Crooks was spotted] with their guns drawn, but he did not alert former President Trump’s protective detail to remove him from the stage,” according to the report.

“The [Secret Service] counter sniper told the Committee that while seeing officers with their guns drawn ‘elevated’ the threat level, the thought to notify someone to get Trump off the stage ‘did not cross [his] mind.’”

The sniper agent who killed Thomas Matthew Crooks did not get radio alerts about the threat. AP

Radio problems ‘common’ at Secret Service

A breakdown in communication was a common theme highlighted in the Committee’s report, finding that the sniper team who ultimately killed Crooks failed to pick up local radio alerts about the threat.

Several agents said they failed to pick up local radios on the day of the shooting — which would have allowed them to communicate directly with the local SWAT teams at the site where Crooks was.

Agents also said their agency-issued radios were on the fritz, which they said were common for the Secret Service.

Thomas Matthew Crooks was spotted walking through the Trump rally before taking aim at the former president. Iron-Clad-USA.com via Storyful

Reports of threats were not passed along

Trump’s Butler rally saw the first time a counter-sniper unit was deployed to his campaign rallies over credible intelligence of an Iranian assassination plot targeting the former president.

However, the lead agent charged with securing the Butler rally is accused of not passing along that information to the Special Agent in Charge of the Pittsburgh field office.

According to the report, that local head only learned that the counter-sniper team was going to be in place when he was asked to find housing for the agents.

He told investigators he was never made aware of the additional information about a threat against Trump.

Officials also flagged a failure to set up visual barriers around the rally site. AP

No visual barriers at Trump rally

The report also highlighted the Secret Service’s failure to set up visual barriers around the rally site that could have blocked Crook’s view on Trump from the AGR building.

Despite being just 130 yards away from the stage, Crooks had a clear line of sight on the former president.

Officers stand over the body of the would-be assassin. Obtained by NY Post

Request for Counter Assault team liaisons denied

Trump’s Secret Service detail had requested Counter Assault Team liaisons prior to the Butler rally, but the request was denied.

The agents would have coordinated with the Secret Service and local SWAT teams on the ground, which could have sped up the hunt for Crooks.

“These requests were denied, at times without explanation,” the committee said.

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