Dear Commons Community,
The following was provided by USA Today.
Tony
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Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY
Updated July 14, 2024 at 8:25 PM
Donald Trump and would-be assassin Thomas Crooks started on their violent collision course long before the former president’s political rally ended in gunshots and death.
Crooks, 20, was a one-time registered Republican, a nursing home worker with no criminal record, shy in school, and living in a decent middle-class neighborhood in suburban Pennsylvania with his parents. Trump, 78, was eyeing Crooks’ state as a key battleground – but not in the way that anyone envisioned on Saturday.
Riding high on polls showing that he’s got a strong chance of toppling President Joe Biden, former president Trump had been campaigning for reelection in swing states, and Pennsylvania is a key prize. Trump won the state in 2016, but lost it four years later.
And on July 3, Trump’s campaign announced he would hold a rally at the Butler Farm Show grounds, about 30 miles north of Pittsburgh.
“Pennsylvania has been ravaged by monumental surges in violent crime as a direct result of Biden’s and Democrats’ pro-criminal policies,” Trump’s campaign said in announcing the event, noting that when he’s elected, he’ll “re-establish law and order in Pennsylvania!”
The Saturday attack on Trump turned the heated rhetoric of the 2024 presidential campaign freshly violent. Authorities said bullets fired from Crooks’ AR-15 style rifle about 150 yards away grazed Trump’s ear, killed a rally attendee as he dove to protect his family, and critically wounded two others. Secret Service agents killed Crooks moments later.
Attack planned well in advance
Investigators are still seeking Crooks’ motive – despite his Republican leanings, he had donated recently to a progressive voter-turnout campaign in 2021 – but indicated he’d planned the attack well in advance.
The shooting marks the first assassination attempt against a former or current U.S. president since President Ronald Reagan was injured in a March 1981 shooting at a Washington, D.C. hotel.
There are many questions about why Crooks turned into a would-be presidential assassin, firing indiscriminately into hordes of political supporters.
FBI special agent Kevin Rojek said on a call with media that law enforcement located “a suspicious device” when they searched the Crooks’ vehicle , and that it’s being analyzed at the FBI crime lab.
“As far as the actions of the shooter immediately prior to the event and any interaction that he may have had with law enforcement, we’re still trying to flesh out those details now,” Rojek said.
None of Crooks’ shocked neighbors or high school classmates described him as violent or that he in any way signaled he was intent on harming Trump. Sunday morning, reporters and curious locals swarmed the leafy streets of the home where Crooks lived with his parents in Bethel Park, about 50 miles from the shooting scene.
Those who knew him described a quiet young man who often walked to work at a nearby nursing home. One classmate said he was bullied and often ate alone in high school.
Sunday morning, neighbor Cathy Caplan, 45, extended her morning walk about a quarter mile to glimpse what was happening outside Crooks’ home.“It came on the morning news and I was like ‘I know that street,’” said Caplan, who works for the local school district. “It feels like something out of a movie.”
Dietary aide turned deadly killer
Authorities say they are examining Crooks’ phone, social media and online activity for motivation. They said he carried no identification and his body had to be identified via DNA and biometric confirmation.
Although no possible motive has yet been released, Crooks nevertheless embodies the achingly familiar profile of an American mass shooter: a young white man, isolated from peers and armed with a high-powered rifle. His attack was one of at least 59 shootings in the United States on Saturday, according to the Gun Violence Archive.
According to records and online posts of the ceremony, Crooks graduated Bethel Park High School, about 42 miles from Butler, on June 3, 2022. That same day, Trump met briefly with investigators at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida as they examined whether he improperly took classified documents with him when he left the White House.
A classmate remembered Crooks as a frequent target of bullies. Kids picked on him for wearing camouflage to class and his quiet demeanor, Jason Kohler, 21, said. Crooks usually ate lunch alone, Kohler said.
Crooks worked as dietary aide at the Bethel Park Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation, less than a mile from his home. In a statement provided to USA TODAY on Sunday, Marcie Grimm, the facility’s administrator, said she was “shocked and saddened to learn of his involvement.”
Neighbor Dean Sierka, 52, has known Crooks and his parents for years. The families live a few doors apart on a winding suburban street, and Sierka’s daughter, who attended elementary, middle and high school with Crooks, remembers him as quiet and shy. Sierka said they saw Crooks at least once a week, often when he was walking to the nursing home from his parents’ three-bedroom brick house.
“You wouldn’t have expected this,” Sierka said. “The parents and the family are all really nice people.”
“It’s crazy,” he added.