Senate hearing on Trump assassination attempt and Secret Service failures

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Updated 3:41 PM EDT, Tue July 30, 2024
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Hawley has tense exchange with Secret Service official
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What we covered here

  • The Senate Judiciary and Homeland Security committees held an at-times dramatic hearing on the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump as multiple investigations continue into what went wrong.
  • Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe made his first public appearance in that role. “This is a failure of the Secret Service,” he said.
  • Former Director Kimberly Cheatle stepped down last week after bipartisan criticism of the agency and a perceived lack of transparency to Congress.
  • FBI investigators continue to search for the shooter’s motive. He used an alias to purchase weapons and chemicals, but may be tied to two online accounts, including one with antisemitic posts. See CNN’s?visual timeline of the shooting.
  • Trump has agreed to speak to the FBI for a voluntary victim interview.
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Takeaways from today's hearing

Secret Service acting Director?Ronald Rowe provided new details about the assassination attempt of Donald Trump on Tuesday, delivering forceful testimony at a Senate hearing about the agency’s failures earlier this month in Butler, Pennsylvania.

Rowe testified that Secret Service agents on Trump’s security detail, as well as snipers on duty, were not told that the shooter, Thomas Matthew Crooks, was positioned on a nearby roof with a rifle and only learned of his presence after he started shooting.

Here are the key takeaways from the hearing:

  • Rowe highlighted the failures of communications during the rally in Butler, saying that information about Crooks was “siloed” and “stuck” in local law enforcement channels.
  • Rowe confirmed that the reason a counter-drone system was not deployed at the Butler rally earlier in the day was because of connectivity issues.
  • Blaming local law enforcement: Moving forward, Rowe said, the Secret Service will avoid assuming local law enforcement agencies are fully capable of fulfilling their role in protecting an event.
  • Republican Sens. Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley got into dramatic shouting matches with Rowe, including over why no USSS agents have been fired.
  • Officials have identified a social media account possibly related to Crooks that has “antisemitic and anti-immigration themes, to espouse political violence, and are described as extreme in nature,” FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate said.

Read more takeaways from the hearing.

FBI is looking at Gab account that could be connected to shooter

FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate said that Tuesday the bureau is looking into an account on to social media platform Gab that may have espoused support for Joe Biden.

Abbate told senators Tuesday that investigators are looking into at least two accounts that may be connected in the shooter. On one account, the shooter seemed to “reflect antisemitic and anti-immigration themes, to espouse political violence, and are described as extreme in nature.”

But a separate account on the platform Gab appears to have “differing points of view,” Abbate said.

Gab CEO Andrew Tobra revealed last week that the would-be assassin may have had an account on the site, which is an alternative social media network popular with conservatives, the alt-right and some extremists. Tobra claimed that the account in question was “pro-Biden.”

Senate hearing concludes after hours of testimony from top law enforcement officials

The Senate hearing on the assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump has ended after hours of testimony from acting US Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe and FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate.

The hearing held by the Senate Judiciary and Homeland Security committees is the fourth such hearing on Capitol Hill to feature testimony from law enforcement officials in the weeks since the assassination attempt earlier this month.

During more than three hours of testimony, Rowe and Abbate fielded dozens of questions from lawmakers over the security failures, with the officials revealing new details about the federal probe into the incident and explaining how the USSS is working to ensure future lapses don’t occur.

Crooks was killed within 15.5 seconds, Secret Service says

Under questions of why Secret Service snipers did not see Trump’s would-be assassin before he shot the former president, acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe told lawmakers that within 15.5 seconds of Thomas Matthew Crooks’ first shot, he was killed.

“Within 15.5 seconds of his first shot, he’s neutralized,” Rowe said of Crooks.

Prior to Crooks shooting at Trump, the Secret Service snipers were not aware of Crooks’ presence on the roof, Rowe testified.

“I believe he was obscured by that roof,” Rowe said, noting that Crooks was below the visibility line of USSS snipers before he fired.

Senators largely praise Rowe for performance in hearing but some call for more firings

As senators left the hearing about the assassination attempt against former President Donald Trump, they gave bipartisan praise for acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe’s performance – to a point.

“I think Rowe did a good job,” GOP Sen. Thom Tillis said. “He’s not trying to varnish anything. He knows that there was catastrophic mistakes.”

Tillis did say that “someone in the Secret Service has to be held accountable,” but added that he did not know specifically who should be.

Unlike last week’s hearing with former Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle, no one has called for Rowe to resign.

Rowe also garnered praise from California Democratic Sen. Laphonza Butler. “He has been authoritative. He has proven that he had been out at the camps at the site, and he is taking responsibility,” she said. “I think he’s being affirmative in the positions that he’s offering.”

But Sen. Gary Peters, chair of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, offered more nuanced feedback without directly criticizing Rowe. “He’s been straightforward and candid with answers, but we still have a lot more to go in this investigation,” Peters said.?

This praise offered by the senators has also been partnered by criticism of the Secret Service during the hearing. Notably, GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham said “somebody’s got to be fired. Nothing’s going to change until somebody loses their job.”

Republican Sen. Ted Cruz acknowledged that Rowe “was more forthcoming.”

“That’s a step forward,” the Texas senator said. “But when asked specific questions, he would not provide specific answers.”

Second shouting match between Rowe and GOP senator over Trump v. Biden security details

Republican Sen. Ted Cruz and acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe shouted over each other Tuesday in a heated exchange over why Donald Trump, as a former president, doesn’t get the same amount of Secret Service security as the current president.

“There is a difference between the sitting president of the United States,” Rowe said.

“Then what’s the difference,” Cruz yelled, cutting Rowe off.

Cruz also accused the US Secret Service leadership as making a “political decision” about how much security Trump received. “I believe that the Secret Service leadership made a political decision to deny these requests,” Cruz said.?

Rowe pushed back saying, “What I will tell you is that Secret Service agents are not political.”

"This could have been our Texas School Book Depository," Rowe says in shouting match with senator

In a heated exchange during Tuesday’s hearing, Republican Sen. Josh Hawley attacked Secret Service acting Director Ronald Rowe for not firing individuals involved in the security decisions around the rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13.

During the exchange, Rowe loudly objected to Hawley’s persistent questions of why individuals weren’t fired.

“I will not rush to judgement. People will be held accountable,” Rowe said, adding that investigations were still on going into the failures that day.“

Hawley shot back: “Is it not prima fascia that somebody has failed? The former president was shot.”

“Then fire somebody,” Hawley said.

Rowe said that he would not rush to judgment and unfairly persecute individuals.

“We have to be able to have a proper investigation into this,” Rowe said.

GOP senator rips into top FBI official: “You're a black hole”

Sen. Rick Scott questions FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate at a hearing in Washington, DC, on July 30.

Republican Sen. Rick Scott ripped into FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate on Tuesday, accusing him of being a “black hole” and not being transparent enough about the bureau’s probe into the assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump.

“You’re a black hole. You lose the support of the American public because people don’t believe you’re being direct with them,” Scott, who represents Florida, told Abbate. “I completely disagree with your approach.”

Secret Service didn't know a person with a weapon was at the rally, Rowe says

US Secret Service agents were never told that a person with a weapon was at the July 13 Trump rally, Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe testified Tuesday.

The acting director repeatedly said that though local law enforcement was alerted to an armed person on a nearby roof around 30 seconds before the attempted assassin fired, the Secret Service was never told that that there was a man on the roof with a gun.

Republican senators have pushed Rowe several times over why the former president was allowed to take the stage for his rally speech despite warnings of a suspicious individual, and why he wasn’t pulled of the stage sooner.

Acting Secret Service Director says: “We assumed that the state and locals had it”

In highlighting the failures on the day Trump was nearly killed, acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe pointed to the agency leaning on local law enforcement to cover the area where the shooter took his position.

“We assumed that the state and locals had it,” Rowe said of the area where Thomas Matthew Crooks climbed up the side of a building near the rally with his rifle.

“We made an assumption,” Rowe said, explaining that the Secret Service believed there would be sufficient eyes to cover the area and that local law enforcement would have a counter sniper in the AGR building where Crooks took his position.

Rowe rebuffs claim from local SWAT team that they weren’t briefed by feds ahead of rally

Acting US Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe rebuffed a claim from a local SWAT team that helped provide security at the Butler rally that they didn’t get a briefing from the federal agency the morning of the event, saying the local team’s leader did receive a briefing from USSS.

“With respect to the snipers that went on national television and gave an interview and said that they did not get a briefing from the Secret Service, they were not – they were supporting through mutual aid, and our personnel briefed the tactical team leader that was leading that element that was providing this counter-sniper,” Rowe said in response to a question from GOP Sen. Ron Johnson.

Members of the Beaver County SWAT team claimed in a recent interview with ABC News that they were supposed to have a face-to-face briefing with the Secret Service when the agents arrived in Butler but that no such meeting took place.

“We were supposed to get a face-to-face briefing with the Secret Service members whenever they arrived, and that never happened,” Jason Woods, a sniper on the team, told ABC News.

Rowe says that a counter-drone system could have prevented the shooting

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe confirmed to members of Congress that the reason a counter-drone system was not deployed at the Butler rally earlier in the day was because of connectivity issues.

“On this day in particular, because of the connectivity challenge … there was a delay,” Rowe said of why a counter drone system was not deployed at the time. Thomas Matthew Crooks flew his own drone around the area two hours before Trump took the stage.

The issue has “cost me a lot of sleep,” Rowe said. “What if we would have geolocated him because that counter (unmanned aircraft system) platform would have been up.”

Rowe said that, had the system been up, law enforcement may have been able to see Crooks’ use of drone and approached him well before the shooting.The acting director also said that the Secret Service will now work with the Department of Homeland Security to set up their own, private connection, and not rely on public domain connections.

Rowe says Secret Service radio traffic at rally was not recorded

Acting US Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe said that that encrypted radio communications among the agents on the day of the shooting were not recorded.

Pressed by Republican Sen. Ron Johnson, Rowe said that the agency did not memorialize radio traffic from events outside DC that were not presidential or vice presidential stops.

Secret Service shows images of local counter sniper's view of rooftop

Rowe points to images on poster board during a hearing on Tuesday in Washington, DC.

During Tuesday’s hearing, Secret Service acting Director Ronald Rowe questioned why local law enforcement posted nearby didn’t see Donald Trump’s shooter on the roof as the investigation continues into the security failure at the July 13 rally.

Rowe showed lawmakers images of what the local law enforcement’s counter sniper team could see from their position in a building next to where Trump’s would-be assassin took his eight shots.

Rowe added: “I cannot understand why there was not better coverage or at least somebody looking at that roofline when that’s where they were posted.”

However, Rowe later stressed that the security failure started with the Secret Service.

“This is a failure of the Secret Service,” Rowe said.

He also highlighted the quick action of the sniper who killed Crooks and the difficult shot he took. “Our counter sniper, this individual, I know him, I consider him a friend,” Rowe said of the sniper. “He exemplifies the courage, the skill and the ability to respond under great stress in such short time and neutralize the threat.”

Acting USSS director says officers need to go back to using radio rather than texts

Acting US Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe stressed Tuesday that law enforcement personnel working to secure key events and protectees need to be communicating via radio in order to maximize “collective awareness” of potential issues.

“I want people using the radio,” he continued. “So it’s great that the tactical elements are talking to each other. It’s great that the shift is talking to each other. But we have to be able to make sure that whenever we come across a situation that everyone has situational awareness of this.”

Much of the communication among law enforcement officers about Thomas Matthew Crooks before he began shooting at former President Donald Trump took place over text.

Text messages between law enforcement before?the assassination attempt?suggest that some officers raised the shooter’s presence at the rally more than 90 minutes before he climbed onto a roof and fired eight rounds at Trump.

Rowe says a "failure to challenge our own assumptions" led to security lapses

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe said that the security lapses that left former President Donald Trump vulnerable stemmed from a “failure of imagination” about the harm people want to do to protectees and an agency “failure to challenge our own assumptions” about the planning being done with local law enforcement.

Going forward, Rowe said, the Secret Service would be “very specific about what we want” when talking to its partners and make requests.

He praised the local and state officials the agency works with, but said, “We need to be very clear to them and that may have contributed to this situation.”

Information about shooter was “siloed” in local police communications, Rowe says

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe described the breakdown in law enforcement communications in the moments before the attempted assassination of Donald Trump, testifying that information about the shooter was “stuck” in a local law enforcement channel.

“The only thing we had was that locals were working an issue at the three o’clock – which would have been the former president’s right-hand side – which is where the shot came. Nothing about man on the roof, nothing about man with a gun. None of that information ever made it over our net,” Rowe said.

Sen. Gary Peters said that local law enforcement has claimed they were “only able to call in to a state command center” and not able to easily communicate threats to the Secret Service.

But Peters also noted that Deputy FBI Director Paul Abbate testified that “there was about 30 seconds between when the local law enforcement reported that there was a man on the roof with a gun” and when the shooter fired.

“If it’s communicated directly to a counter-sniper team, would that be enough time to react prior to the firing of those shots,” Peters asked.

The acting director said that the Secret Service tactical teams had radios and “embeds” from local law enforcement.

“It is troubling to me that we did not get that information as quickly as we should have,” Rowe said. “We didn’t know that there was this incident going on.”

Hearing room falls silent as Rowe delivers emotionally charged answer

US Secret Service Acting Director Ronald Rowe testifies during a hearing on the security failures leading to the assassination attempt on former US President Donald Trump on Tuesday in Washington, DC.

As acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe displayed poster boards illustrating the sightline of both the would-be assassin of Donald Trump and the counter assault sniper team, necks of attendees craned to get a better look.

Palpable tension was felt while Rowe raised his voice displaying his frustration with the local law enforcement that he said was tasked with covering the building.

Sen. Alex Padilla of California stood from his seat and walked to gain a better vantage point of the poster board.

As Rowe’s emotional response concluded, Sen. Rand Paul said, “Director, I’m encouraged by your attitude, what you brought here today.”

Sen. Amy Klobuchar also praised Rowe, thanking him for “your own personal emotion and reaction to your visit and what had gone wrong.”

Secret Service is ramping up hiring in part because of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe told the Senate that the agency will end the year having increased its force by 200 agents, a ramp-up in hiring related in part to the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.?

Rowe told Senate Judiciary Chairman Dick Durbin – who had asked about the agency’s protective services loss of 365 agents over the last decade – that this would be the “first time” in a “number of years” that the agency would make such staffing increases. Rowe stressed the hiring gains were not because of a drop in standards but because there had been “efficiencies” created in the hiring process.

Rowe stressed that only 2% of applicants make it through the hiring process.

Shooter may have posted antisemitic and anti-immigration posts online, FBI says

Investigators have uncovered a social media account with posts espousing political violence that may be connected to the would-be Donald Trump assassin, FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate said Tuesday.

Officials have repeatedly said that they have struggled to understand what the 20-year-old shooter’s motive was, and that they are combing his online presence for more information.

“Something just very recently uncovered that I want to share is a social media account, which is believed to be associated with this with the shooter – in about the 2019, 2020 timeframe,” Abbate said Tuesday.

On that account, “there were over 700 comments,” Abbate said, which, “if ultimately attributable to the shooter, appear to reflect antisemitic and anti-immigration themes, to espouse political violence, and are described as extreme in nature.”

Local officer saw Crooks with a firearm just before shooting, FBI says

Deputy Director of the FBI Paul Abbate testifies at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington, DC, on July 30.

FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate provided more details about how a local police officer communicated with other officers about seeing Thomas Matthew Crooks on the roof with a firearm seconds before he began shooting toward former President Donald Trump.

“At approximately 6:11 p.m., a local police officer was lifted to the roof by another officer, saw the shooter and radioed that he was armed with ‘a long gun.’ Within approximately the next 30 seconds, the shots were fired,” Abbate said.

According to previous testimony from officials, one officer hoisted up another officer, who saw Crooks with a rifle. Crooks then turned his weapon to the officer, who then let go of his grip on the roof and fell back to the ground.

Abbate also said Tuesday that recently discovered video from a local business showed Crooks getting onto the roof of the building from which he staged his shooting “at approximately 6:06 p.m.”

“And at approximately 6:08 p.m. the subject was observed on the roof by local law enforcement,” he said.

Acting Secret Service director promises “full cooperation” with Senate investigations

Rowe during a US Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and Senate Judiciary joint committee-hearing on the security failures leading to the assassination attempt on former US President Donald Trump, at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on July 30.

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe told senators Tuesday that the Secret Service will provide “full cooperation” to Congress as they review the attempted assassination of the former president.

“I instructed my staff to provide full cooperation and respond expeditiously on a continuing basis to ensure you have the information you need to conduct your critical oversight,” Rowe said during a Senate hearing Tuesday.

The acting director said that he was prepared to tell the panel with “details on the Secret Service’s advanced security planning for the Butler farm show site, facts as we know them regarding the incident itself, known breakdowns in executing the security plan, and corrective actions that the agency is taking to ensure that nothing like this happens again.”

Rowe told the senators that “I’ve heard your calls for accountability, and I take them very seriously,” and said that the agency is “reviewing the actions and decision making of Secret Service personnel in the lead-up to and on the day of the attack.”

“If this investigation reveals that Secret Service employees violated agency protocols, those employees will be held accountable to our disciplinary process,” he said.

Head of Secret Service says agents had no knowledge of shooter until he fired at Trump

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe said that the Secret Service sniper team and Donald Trump’s security detail did not know Thomas Matthew Crooks was on a roof with a rifle until the would-be assassin nearly killed Trump.

“Based on what I know right now, neither the Secret Service counter sniper teams nor members of the former president’s security detail had any knowledge that there was a man on the AGR roof with a firearm,” Rowe said.

Confusion has circled around when local law enforcement passed along information to the Secret Service on Crooks, who they originally spotted over 90 minutes before the shooting.

Rowe added: “It is my understanding those personnel were not aware the assailant had a firearm until they heard gunshots.”

“Prior to that,” Rowe said, “they were operating with the knowledge that local law enforcement was working an issue of a suspicious individual prior to the shots being fired.”

Acting US Secret Service director says agency will use drones to prevent future security lapses

Acting Director of the US Secret Service Ronald Rowe and and Deputy Director of the FBI Paul Abbate appear before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on July 30.

Acting US Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe said Tuesday that the agency has implemented new procedures to prevent future security lapses, including the use of drones and a new vetting process for security plans.

“To prevent similar lapses from occurring in the future, I directed our personnel to ensure every event site security plan is thoroughly vetted by multiple experienced supervisors before it is implemented,” Rowe testified.

He continued: “It is clear to me that other protective enhancements could have strengthened our security at the Butler event. As such, I have directed the expanded use of unmanned aerial systems at protective sites to help detect threats on roofs and other elevated threats.”

Graham: “Somebody’s gotta be fired” after Trump assassination attempt

Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, said Tuesday that “somebody’s gotta be fired” from the US Secret Service as a result of the assassination attempt on Donald Trump.

“Several of us from the military have a military background. If this happened in the military, a lot of people will be fired,” Graham said. “And if a lot of people are not fired, the system failed yet again.”

Rowe: Shooting was a "failure on multiple levels"

Rowe during the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee and Senate Judiciary Committee joint hearing on "Examination of the Security Failures Leading to the Assassination Attempt on Former President Trump" on Tuesday in Washington, DC.

In his opening statement, acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe testified that the attempted assassination of Donald Trump was a “failure on multiple levels.”

“I applaud the action of our tactical teams that responded so quickly,” Rowe said, adding that he wanted to thank local law enforcement for assisting the Secret Service.

Rowe also noted there were “multiple ongoing investigations” and said he pledges “my full support to those inquiries.”

Rowe already noted that he has “identified gaps in our security” on July 13 and have taken steps to fix them.

Senate hearing on Trump assassination attempt begins

Acting Director of the US Secret Service, Ronald Rowe, and and Deputy Director of the FBI Paul Abbate appear before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on July 30.

The Senate hearing on the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump, featuring testimony from acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe and FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate, has begun.

Tuesday’s hearing is being hosted jointly by the Senate’s Judiciary and the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committees. It marks the fourth congressional hearing examining the security lapses at Trump’s Pennsylvania rally earlier this month.

“I cannot defend why that roof was not better secured,” acting USSS director will say

Ronald Rowe, acting director of the US Secret Service, leaves the US Capitol after a briefing with senators on Thursday, July 25, 2024.

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe will tell senators from the Homeland Security and Judiciary committees that the he can’t explain or defend the security failures on July 13, according to prepared remarks released late Monday.

According to the remarks, Rowe has directed the Secret Service to have multiple experienced supervisors go through each security plan for all future protected sites and events.

“One of my first actions as Acting Director was traveling to the Butler Farm Show site,” Rowe’s prepared remarks say, “which was no longer a crime scene, to better understand how our protection failed.”

?Read more on Rowe’s prepared remarks.

75% of adults say Secret Service could have done more to prevent shooting

Most Americans think that the US Secret Service didn’t do all it could to prevent the assassination attempt against former President Donald Trump, a recent survey shows, with that sentiment particularly pronounced among Republicans.?

In the recent past, views of the Secret Service have been generally positive. In?a Gallup poll taken last fall,?55% of Americans rated the Secret Service as excellent or good, ranking it second to only the US Postal Service among federal agencies. Democrats’ views of most agencies – including the Secret Service – were more positive than Republicans’ assessments, a divide that Gallup said likely reflected Democratic control of the White House.

Just a quarter of the public said they agency did all that it could.

Where the investigation into the Trump assassination attempt stands

Former President Donald Trump is rushed offstage by U.S. Secret Service agents after being grazed by a bullet during a rally on July 13 in Butler, Pennsylvania.?

More than two weeks after Donald Trump survived an assassination attempt, federal investigators are still trying to uncover the motive of the former president’s would-be assassin.

The nascent probe being led by the FBI has found that the shooter, Thomas Matthew Crooks, was “highly intelligent” and had a growing interest in shooting, Kevin Rojek, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s Pittsburgh Field Office, said on Monday.

Rojek also said that Trump has agreed to sit for a victim interview with the FBI – a routine part of criminal investigations. Such interviews are voluntary.

Crooks, Rojek said, used aliases to make firearms-related purchases online, beginning in the spring of 2023. The agent said that during the first half of this year, Crooks made “six chemical precursor-related purchases online of materials used to create the explosive devices recovered in the subject’s vehicle and home.”

Crooks used foreign-based encrypted email accounts to purchase firearm components, chemicals and other explosive components, investigators told reporters on Monday.

CNN has reported that text messages between law enforcement before the shooting began suggest that some officers raised Crooks’ presence at the rally more than 90 minutes before he climbed onto a roof and began firing at Trump.

In text messages obtained by Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley from the Beaver County Emergency Unit, a local countersniper first raised with his colleagues that he saw someone park near their vehicles and sit on a nearby picnic table at 4:26 p.m.

According to the messages, which were first reported by The New York Times, local law enforcement later took a picture of the same man, who turned out to be the shooter, and sent it to other officers in a group chat nearly 30 minutes before Crooks would shoot at Trump at the Butler, Pennsylvania, rally.

The last time a Secret Service head testified before Congress, it didn’t go well

United States Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle testifies before the House Oversight and Accountability Committee during a hearing at the Rayburn House Office Building on July 22 in Washington, DC.

The last time a Secret Service head testified publicly before Congress, the high-stakes hearing didn’t go well.

On July 22 before the House Oversight Committee, then-Director Kimberly Cheatle faced hours of grueling questioning and stinging criticism from Republicans and Democrats over the stunning security failures that led to the assassination attempt against Donald Trump.

Cheatle struggled to answer key questions about the security breakdown and what the agency was doing to prevent it from happening again. She frequently refused to provide any useful information, pointing instead to the FBI’s ongoing probe into the matter.

“We are just nine days out from this incident, and there’s still an ongoing investigation,” Cheatle said last week. “I’m not going to get into specifics of that day.”

During one tense exchange with Rep. Nancy Mace, the South Carolina Republican grew frustrated after Cheatle said she’d have to get back to the congresswoman later on whether she provided the committee with relevant audio and video recordings.

“That is a no. You’re full of sh*t today,” Mace said. “You’re just being completely dishonest.”

Numerous lawmakers – including the committee’s top Democrat – demanded Cheatle resign.

A day later, she did just that.

Meet the new acting Secret Service director

Ronald Rowe leaves the US Capitol after a briefing with senators on Thursday, July 25.

Ronald Rowe, the US Secret Service’s acting director, will testify exactly a week after he was tapped to lead the embattled law enforcement agency.

Until last Tuesday, Rowe had served for more than a year as the deputy director of the Secret Service, where he has worked for more than two decades.

“I appreciate his willingness to lead the Secret Service at this incredibly challenging moment, as the agency works to get to the bottom of exactly what happened on July 13 and cooperate with ongoing investigations and Congressional oversight,” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said in a statement announcing Rowe’s appointment.

As deputy director under then-Director Kimberly Cheatle, Rowe “was responsible for the direct oversight of the agency’s daily investigative and protective operations,” according to his official biography, which said his portfolio also included “introducing state-of-the-art technologies to enhance the agency’s protective countermeasures.”

His previous leadership positions at the agency include chief of staff to the director and deputy assistant director for the Office of Protective Operations.

He first joined the agency in 1999, according to USSS, and worked as a police officer in West Palm Beach, Florida, prior to that.