Local cops warned secret service they lacked manpower to patrol, secure building used by trump rally shooter: report

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Local police warned the Secret Service ahead of time that they did not have the manpower to secure the building where Thomas Matthew Crooks shot and injured Donald Trump, law enforcement


officials said. Richard Goldinger – the district attorney in Butler County, Pennsylvania, where Saturday’s campaign rally was held – said the Secret Service “was informed that the local


police department did not have manpower to assist with securing that building,” the Washington Post reports. A Secret Service official confirmed Goldinger’s account and said that positioning


an officer and patrol car outside the building was part of the agency’s plan to secure the structure, the Washington Post reported. Despite the failure, Crooks still managed to get on top


of the building, which gave him a clear line of sight on Trump just 130 yards away. Embattled Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle previously told ABC News that the agency decided not to


guard the roof because it was too slanted and posed a safety issue for a law enforcement sniper team. EXPLORE MORE The Secret Service and local police remain under fire over the lapse in


security that allowed Crooks to get a clear shot at Trump. The mounting pressure against the agencies comes following a flood of reports that Crooks had been sought after by officers at the


rally for about 30 minutes before the shooting, with one local cop coming face-to-face with the gunman just moments before he opened fire on the former president. Both agencies have pointed


the finger at each other over the shooting, with the Secret Service claiming it was up to local police to guard the outer perimeter of the rally where Crooks fired from. The Department of


Homeland Security’s inspector general has opened a formal investigation into the Secret Service’s handling of Trump’s protection on the day of the shooting. It came following President Joe


Biden’s call to launch an independent review of the security at the rally, with top Republican officials calling on Cheatle to resign over the apparent security failings.