We get a little nugget of info at a time and try to assemble a complete picture.
Thats the issue with sticking to the 'facts' at this stage.
Theres really no way to tell what the facts are and we can only speculate.
aggiehawg said:That is awfully fast for a DNA match without he or a relative being in a law enforcement data base. Now they may have used buchol swabs from the parents and used that to make such a quick ID.Quote:
Crooks carried no identification with him, forcing authorities to use his DNA to confirm his identity in the early hours of Sunday morning US time.
Fenrir said:Meanwhile we have people here that are seemingly serious that they aren't sure this failure is sufficient cause to call for a change in the head of the SS.WolfCall said:
More developments reported in the DailyMail.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13643655/Secret-Service-spotted-Thomas-Crooks-hunting-rangefinder-inside-Trump-rally-THREE-HOURS-shooting.htmlQuote:
Secret Service spotted Thomas Crooks at Trump rally THREE HOURS before shooting
By WILLS ROBINSON FOR DAILYMAIL.COM and PAUL FARRELL AND WILL POTTER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 10:23 EDT, 17 July 2024 | UPDATED: 11:21 EDT, 17 July 2024
Donald Trump's would-be assassin Thomas Matthew Crooks was at the former president's rally three hours before shooting him and sparked the suspicions of the Secret Service because he was carrying a rangefinder used by hunters to take long shots.
The 20-year-old gunman told his boss that he needed the day off from work on Saturday and gave colleagues a final chilling message: That he would be back on Sunday.
At around 3pm on Saturday, Crooks was spotted at the rally's security screening area and tried to pass through metal detectors with the rangefinder, which is used by shooters to measure distance, CNN reported.
The device, which looks like a small pair of binoculars, would not have prevented him getting into the rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, but did put him on law enforcement's radar.
The Secret Service watched him but lost track of Crooks when he left the secure area.
He is then believed to have collected the rifle he used to shoot Trump, kill a rally attendee and wound others, from his car, which also contained a bulletproof vest and two explosive devices.
Then, about 40 minutes before the shooting, Crooks was back on the Secret Service radar.
A photograph showing the sniper appearing to crawl on the ground while scouring the area was circulated to law enforcement as a suspicious sighting at 5:30pm.
Around 6:11pm, Crooks took up a position on a slanted roof and shot at Trump from a distance of around 165 yards, wounding him in the ear and killing retired fire chief Corey Comperatore.
Witnesses spotted Crooks crawling onto the roof of the American Glass Research building.
A Secret Service counter-sniper team codenamed 'Hawkeye' also spotted him looking at their position through the rangefinder.
The latest bombshell developments raised more questions about the massive security failures that led to the attempted assassination of the former president.
Law enforcement took a photo of Crooks an hour before the shooting, adding to mounting evidence that they knew of his presence well before he pulled the trigger.
Two more newly released images also show a bicycle owned by Crooks that was recovered close to the scene, and a remote detonator, which was recovered from his dead body alongside his cellphone.
It was later revealed that the detonator was connected to explosives found in his car.....
They also ran his finger prints, probably through the drivers license database. His DNA would have been taken on scene, and since they had contact with his parents pretty quickly, they got a sample from them and rushed the test.aggiehawg said:That is awfully fast for a DNA match without he or a relative being in a law enforcement data base. Now they may have used buchol swabs from the parents and used that to make such a quick ID.Quote:
Crooks carried no identification with him, forcing authorities to use his DNA to confirm his identity in the early hours of Sunday morning US time.
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Read where he asked dad the borrow the rifle and said he wanted to go to the range.
Mom and dad are sitting on the couch, hear all this and immediately make the connect and call 911.
If you 20-year old kid nobody reports you missing on the same day.
Quote:
CNN
Within 30 minutes of the shooting at Donald Trump's Pennsylvania rally on Saturday, federal law enforcement used a byzantine paper records system to track down decade-old gun sales records to help identify the 20-year-old would-be assassin.
Quote:
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives analysts at a facility in West Virginia search through millions of documents by hand every day to try to identify the provenance of guns used in crimes. Typically, the bureau takes around eight days to track a weapon, though for urgent traces that average falls to 24 hours.
Yeah, they did that in 30 minutes... notice how much they hate there is not a national gun registry in this article. It is riddled with "we need a national registry" jargonQuote:
Agents tracked the AR-15 style rifle the shooter used to a 2013 purchase from the now-closed dealer, sources familiar with investigators' findings told CNN. The revelation added to complications for the FBI, ATF and other agencies who were trying to identify the gunman after he was shot and killed by a US Secret Service sniper.
ATF agents worked with the gun's manufacturer, and manually searched through the closed gun shop's paper records, eventually tracing the rifle to the shooter's father. Investigators believe that the shooter's father may have been an avid firearms collector or bought and sold weapons, sources briefed on the matter said.
Secolobo said:
Sure…
You can't make this F'n stuff up.
How the ATF identified the Trump rally shooter in 30 minutesQuote:
CNN
Within 30 minutes of the shooting at Donald Trump's Pennsylvania rally on Saturday, federal law enforcement used a byzantine paper records system to track down decade-old gun sales records to help identify the 20-year-old would-be assassin.
Tell me you have a gun registry without telling me you have a gun registry.ttha_aggie_09 said:
Holy crap - what a freaking lie:Yeah, they did that in 30 minutes... notice how much they hate there is not a national gun registry in this article. It is riddled with "we need a national registry" jargonQuote:
Agents tracked the AR-15 style rifle the shooter used to a 2013 purchase from the now-closed dealer, sources familiar with investigators' findings told CNN. The revelation added to complications for the FBI, ATF and other agencies who were trying to identify the gunman after he was shot and killed by a US Secret Service sniper.
ATF agents worked with the gun's manufacturer, and manually searched through the closed gun shop's paper records, eventually tracing the rifle to the shooter's father. Investigators believe that the shooter's father may have been an avid firearms collector or bought and sold weapons, sources briefed on the matter said.
And there in lies the problem.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
But who really knows about the veracity any of this.
We get a little nugget of info at a time and try to assemble a complete picture.
Thats the issue with sticking to the 'facts' at this stage.
Theres really no way to tell what the facts are and we can only speculate.
When gun dealers go out of business, unless another FFL takes it over, the records go to the ATF.Fenrir said:Tell me you have a gun registry without telling me you have a gun registry.ttha_aggie_09 said:
Holy crap - what a freaking lie:Yeah, they did that in 30 minutes... notice how much they hate there is not a national gun registry in this article. It is riddled with "we need a national registry" jargonQuote:
Agents tracked the AR-15 style rifle the shooter used to a 2013 purchase from the now-closed dealer, sources familiar with investigators' findings told CNN. The revelation added to complications for the FBI, ATF and other agencies who were trying to identify the gunman after he was shot and killed by a US Secret Service sniper.
ATF agents worked with the gun's manufacturer, and manually searched through the closed gun shop's paper records, eventually tracing the rifle to the shooter's father. Investigators believe that the shooter's father may have been an avid firearms collector or bought and sold weapons, sources briefed on the matter said.
Fenrir said:Tell me you have a gun registry without telling me you have a gun registry.ttha_aggie_09 said:
Holy crap - what a freaking lie:Yeah, they did that in 30 minutes... notice how much they hate there is not a national gun registry in this article. It is riddled with "we need a national registry" jargonQuote:
Agents tracked the AR-15 style rifle the shooter used to a 2013 purchase from the now-closed dealer, sources familiar with investigators' findings told CNN. The revelation added to complications for the FBI, ATF and other agencies who were trying to identify the gunman after he was shot and killed by a US Secret Service sniper.
ATF agents worked with the gun's manufacturer, and manually searched through the closed gun shop's paper records, eventually tracing the rifle to the shooter's father. Investigators believe that the shooter's father may have been an avid firearms collector or bought and sold weapons, sources briefed on the matter said.
I get that. Those records are obviously being digitized and searchable based on that response time. This is basically a loophole around the ban on using NICS to create a registry.techno-ag said:Fenrir said:Tell me you have a gun registry without telling me you have a gun registry.ttha_aggie_09 said:
Holy crap - what a freaking lie:Yeah, they did that in 30 minutes... notice how much they hate there is not a national gun registry in this article. It is riddled with "we need a national registry" jargonQuote:
Agents tracked the AR-15 style rifle the shooter used to a 2013 purchase from the now-closed dealer, sources familiar with investigators' findings told CNN. The revelation added to complications for the FBI, ATF and other agencies who were trying to identify the gunman after he was shot and killed by a US Secret Service sniper.
ATF agents worked with the gun's manufacturer, and manually searched through the closed gun shop's paper records, eventually tracing the rifle to the shooter's father. Investigators believe that the shooter's father may have been an avid firearms collector or bought and sold weapons, sources briefed on the matter said.
Gun stores are required to keep records. When a store closes, the ATF receives all the records.
I believe the SS confirmed that he had borrowed the rifle the previous day to go practice shooting, so it seems like it was normal for him to have borrowed it sometimes, perhaps with his dad's permission.ttha_aggie_09 said:This brings up a few interesting points:BadMoonRisin said:
Well, I suppose that explains why they called police shortly after the shooting. He must have noticed that his son was missing along with his rifle.
Why would you call the cops for a missing 20 year old? That's an adult...
Why would they notice the rifle is missing? Did they just have it laying in their closet on the floor and notice it missing?
Sure seems weird that you would not know where your son is and then immediately go "Oh, I better make sure he didn't take his rifle to go and kill someone". If the latter is the case, especially since they're known counselors or mental health professionals, that is an indication that they KNEW they're son was a potential problem. It also means they should have locked up their rifle in a safe or somewhere else with much more caution...
Fenrir said:I get that. Those records are obviously being digitized and searchable based on that response time. This is basically a loophole around the ban on using NICS to create a registry.techno-ag said:Fenrir said:Tell me you have a gun registry without telling me you have a gun registry.ttha_aggie_09 said:
Holy crap - what a freaking lie:Yeah, they did that in 30 minutes... notice how much they hate there is not a national gun registry in this article. It is riddled with "we need a national registry" jargonQuote:
Agents tracked the AR-15 style rifle the shooter used to a 2013 purchase from the now-closed dealer, sources familiar with investigators' findings told CNN. The revelation added to complications for the FBI, ATF and other agencies who were trying to identify the gunman after he was shot and killed by a US Secret Service sniper.
ATF agents worked with the gun's manufacturer, and manually searched through the closed gun shop's paper records, eventually tracing the rifle to the shooter's father. Investigators believe that the shooter's father may have been an avid firearms collector or bought and sold weapons, sources briefed on the matter said.
Gun stores are required to keep records. When a store closes, the ATF receives all the records.
🚨President Trump will be attending the funeral of 50-year-old Corey Comperatore, the fire fighter who was shot and killed at the Trump rally on Saturday.🚨
— Laura Loomer (@LauraLoomer) July 17, 2024
The funeral will be this week, and it is PRIVATE.
The public is invited to a procession through Freeport Community Park…
They caught him with a range finder 3 hours before the shooting and did nothing.
— Greg Price (@greg_price11) July 17, 2024
They spotted him 30 minutes before the shooting and did nothing.
They took a literal picture of him and did nothing.
Members of the crowd were pointing at him and did nothing.
They left the most… https://t.co/W3NtyCYvYZ
President Trump's Butler PA rally, what I filmed from the front row immediately after the attempt on President Trump's life.
— Dayanne Acioli (@Dayanneaci) July 17, 2024
Wasn't ready to post this until today.pic.twitter.com/63rYNfC57a
Hornbeck said:
So, why does the ATF not have all these scanned and entered into a database? Seems like they aren't real motivated to change the "antiquated process" of "sifting through" boxes.
A world in which the lady who runs the Secret Service still has a job is one in which the Biden admin simply wanted this to happen.
— Greg Price (@greg_price11) July 17, 2024
BadMoonRisin said:I believe the SS confirmed that he had borrowed the rifle the previous day to go practice shooting, so it seems like it was normal for him to have borrowed it sometimes, perhaps with his dad's permission.ttha_aggie_09 said:This brings up a few interesting points:BadMoonRisin said:
Well, I suppose that explains why they called police shortly after the shooting. He must have noticed that his son was missing along with his rifle.
Why would you call the cops for a missing 20 year old? That's an adult...
Why would they notice the rifle is missing? Did they just have it laying in their closet on the floor and notice it missing?
Sure seems weird that you would not know where your son is and then immediately go "Oh, I better make sure he didn't take his rifle to go and kill someone". If the latter is the case, especially since they're known counselors or mental health professionals, that is an indication that they KNEW they're son was a potential problem. It also means they should have locked up their rifle in a safe or somewhere else with much more caution...
It's a 45min-1 hour drive to the Butler rally site, and he was spotted on site 3 hours prior to the rally start and was still there an hour after it kicked off.
Its a 25 min drive to the shooting range. Toss a couple mags of lead -- an hour max? 25 mins back, thats just 2 hours or less.
If he asked to borrow the rifle and then was gone for 5-6 hours, you might start wondering where he went.
This is all pure speculation, but you get my drift?
What the heck is going in here?????? Multiple shooters??pic.twitter.com/fCaJcW8IH3
— TheQuartering (@TheQuartering) July 17, 2024
Maybe the Church can Canonize him.aginlakeway said:FTAG 2000 said:
Trump arriving at a local hospital ER.EXCLUSIVE: An ER patient's husband captures the moment an injured Trump arrives at a Pennsylvania hospital after surviving an assassination attempt.
— The Epoch Times (@EpochTimes) July 17, 2024
The people in the waiting room then prayed for the former president.
Courtesy of Rick Foerster pic.twitter.com/0A8IBFNT84
Everyone's favorite DEI SS agent there and still showing off her stellar weapon handling skills too.
58 second mark. Patient stands up out of wheelchair.
It's possible.bonfarr said:BadMoonRisin said:I believe the SS confirmed that he had borrowed the rifle the previous day to go practice shooting, so it seems like it was normal for him to have borrowed it sometimes, perhaps with his dad's permission.ttha_aggie_09 said:This brings up a few interesting points:BadMoonRisin said:
Well, I suppose that explains why they called police shortly after the shooting. He must have noticed that his son was missing along with his rifle.
Why would you call the cops for a missing 20 year old? That's an adult...
Why would they notice the rifle is missing? Did they just have it laying in their closet on the floor and notice it missing?
Sure seems weird that you would not know where your son is and then immediately go "Oh, I better make sure he didn't take his rifle to go and kill someone". If the latter is the case, especially since they're known counselors or mental health professionals, that is an indication that they KNEW they're son was a potential problem. It also means they should have locked up their rifle in a safe or somewhere else with much more caution...
It's a 45min-1 hour drive to the Butler rally site, and he was spotted on site 3 hours prior to the rally start and was still there an hour after it kicked off.
Its a 25 min drive to the shooting range. Toss a couple mags of lead -- an hour max? 25 mins back, thats just 2 hours or less.
If he asked to borrow the rifle and then was gone for 5-6 hours, you might start wondering where he went.
This is all pure speculation, but you get my drift?
There are reports of him being spotted outside the AGR building with a rangefinder and then a backpack but no reports of him being seen with the rifle. I don't know how you would have been able to get it from your car to the building without being noticed, did he have the rifle disassembled and stuffed in the backpack?
bonfarr said:BadMoonRisin said:I believe the SS confirmed that he had borrowed the rifle the previous day to go practice shooting, so it seems like it was normal for him to have borrowed it sometimes, perhaps with his dad's permission.ttha_aggie_09 said:This brings up a few interesting points:BadMoonRisin said:
Well, I suppose that explains why they called police shortly after the shooting. He must have noticed that his son was missing along with his rifle.
Why would you call the cops for a missing 20 year old? That's an adult...
Why would they notice the rifle is missing? Did they just have it laying in their closet on the floor and notice it missing?
Sure seems weird that you would not know where your son is and then immediately go "Oh, I better make sure he didn't take his rifle to go and kill someone". If the latter is the case, especially since they're known counselors or mental health professionals, that is an indication that they KNEW they're son was a potential problem. It also means they should have locked up their rifle in a safe or somewhere else with much more caution...
It's a 45min-1 hour drive to the Butler rally site, and he was spotted on site 3 hours prior to the rally start and was still there an hour after it kicked off.
Its a 25 min drive to the shooting range. Toss a couple mags of lead -- an hour max? 25 mins back, thats just 2 hours or less.
If he asked to borrow the rifle and then was gone for 5-6 hours, you might start wondering where he went.
This is all pure speculation, but you get my drift?
There are reports of him being spotted outside the AGR building with a rangefinder and then a backpack but no reports of him being seen with the rifle. I don't know how you would have been able to get it from your car to the building without being noticed, did he have the rifle disassembled and stuffed in the backpack?
Just looks like a round hit the stands there. What am I missing?lb3 said:
Not sure if this belongs here.What the heck is going in here?????? Multiple shooters??pic.twitter.com/fCaJcW8IH3
— TheQuartering (@TheQuartering) July 17, 2024
lb3 said:
Not sure if this belongs here.What the heck is going in here?????? Multiple shooters??pic.twitter.com/fCaJcW8IH3
— TheQuartering (@TheQuartering) July 17, 2024
Yep, that is very possible as well.ttha_aggie_09 said:
A folding stock adapter for an AR is very common
BadMoonRisin said:President Trump's Butler PA rally, what I filmed from the front row immediately after the attempt on President Trump's life.
— Dayanne Acioli (@Dayanneaci) July 17, 2024
Wasn't ready to post this until today.pic.twitter.com/63rYNfC57a
there were none.Monkeypoxfighter said:
I wonder where the checkpoint and metal detectors were that he had to avoid (or be ushered through, as has been suggested)?