SECURITY SABOTAGE? Local SWAT in Butler, Penn., had NO COMMS with Secret Service during Trump rally
It took until
after bloody-eared Donald Trump was picked up off the floor of his podium by Secret Service at the July 13 Butler, Penn., rally for local law enforcement and SWAT teams to have any interactions whatsoever with Secret Service,
first responders confirmed in a recent
ABC News exclusive.
In the below interview, watch and listen as Jason Woods, Pennsylvania's SWAT team officer, spills the beans about the total lack of communication between Secret Service and law enforcement at Trump's Butler rally.
"We were supposed to get a face-to-face briefing with the Secret Service snipers when they arrived, and that never happened," Woods told the interviewer.
"I think that that was probably a pivotal point where I started thinking things were wrong because that never happened and we had no communication with the Secret Service."
When then asked point-blank about whether or not local law enforcement had any communication at all with Secret Service before the shooting, Woods reaffirmed that Secret Service was not there at the meeting and did not cooperate as planned.
"You had no communication with the Secret Service at all on that Saturday?" the interviewer asked.
"Not until after the shooting," Woods responded.
"And by then ...," the interviewer continued.
"... it was too late," Woods said, completing his sentence.
(Related: It
looks as though the "Joe Biden" who held a call after his resignation was just an AI-generated robot.)
Americans demanding answers
Students for Trump chairman Ryan Fournier (@RyanAFournier) received lots of feedback from concerned Americans after he posted the above video clip to his X account.
After thanking X and Elon Musk for allowing it, Fournier pointed out that likely no major media networks will bother to address the elephant in the room concerning the Trump shooting and the Secret Service's mishandling of it.
"If mistake after mistake was made that allowed for the assassination attempt to occur, at what point do we stop accepting that they were really mistakes?" asked someone named Jeff Carlson (@themarketswork).
"Setup. Obviously," responded "GreatAmericanMail" (@mail_american). "At some point, it IS just what it looks like."
Since Secret Service seems to be doing everything within its power to shift the blame from itself to local law enforcement in Butler, it makes sense for Woods and his colleagues to speak out about the disparities between what was planned security-wise at the event and what actually ended up happening.
"I'm not going to say it's an inside job, but there's nothing saying it was an outside job at this point," said "Progressing California" (@ProgressingCali).
"Everything about this day is rotten," added "Bekah" (@TGrammie2).
Another pointed out that jurisdictionally speaking, USSS (Secret Service) had higher authority than Pennsylvania State Police at the Butler rally, meaning they were "supposed to check everyone's work."
"The 'something' that smells rotten is the deliberate omission of presidential protective service which provided just the kinds of gaps needed to pull off a hit where confusion clouded locals' and USSS' judgment," said "Samuel Culper" (@SamlCulper1776). "It gave them TIME to position the assassinS."
"Luckily for President Trump, us and the world, he turned his head at just the right moment, and local police rushed the first shooter, causing his heart rate to spike and interrupt his breathing, aim, and trigger pull. All thanks to local police and supporters drawing frantic attention otherwise, Trump would surely be dead today."
Will Trump win the 2024 election and serve another term? Find out more at
Trump.news.
Sources for this article include:
X.com
NaturalNews.com