These content links are provided by Content.ad. Both Content.ad and the web site upon which the links are displayed may receive compensation when readers click on these links. Some of the content you are redirected to may be sponsored content. View our privacy policy here.

To learn how you can use Content.ad to drive visitors to your content or add this service to your site, please contact us at [email protected].

Family-Friendly Content test

Website owners select the type of content that appears in our units. However, if you would like to ensure that Content.ad always displays family-friendly content on this device, regardless of what site you are on, check the option below. Learn More


Chilling Final Report Exposes Deliberate Dereliction Of Duty At DHS

The Task Force investigating not one, but two, assassination attempts on Trump’s life has just released its findings to the general public.

The 180-page report, which may be reviewed in its entirety here, has emerged just in time before 2025,

As part of creating the report, the Task Force conducted 46 interviews and reviewed 18,000 pages of documents.

And, not surprisingly, turned up an enormous amount of material regarding all the ways in which the Secret Service epically screwed up.

Rather troublingly, it is difficult to tell how many screwups may have been deliberate and how many are linked to pure incompetence, but the report details quite a few errors that could be linked to either of the two.

“The various failures in planning, execution, and leadership … and the preexisting conditions that undermined the effectiveness of the human and material assets deployed that day, coalesced to create an environment in which the former President – and everyone at the campaign event – were exposed to grave danger,” the report ominously began.

Without a doubt. An absolute travesty all around.

The report also noted that there were clearly “several decision points that, if handled differently, could have prevented Crooks from firing eight shots at the Butler rally stage.”

Really makes one wonder. Especially when seeing how unbelievably obvious many of these errors were.

For instance, one of the first major errors includes “the failure to secure a recognized high-risk area immediately adjacent to the venue … gave rise to several vulnerabilities that eventually allowed Crooks to evade law enforcement.”

That error was rather obvious and easy to address in advance, yet for whatever reason, it was not.

That error was also further compounded by other errors.

“The Secret Service did not provide clear guidance to its state and local partners about which entity was responsible for the area,” the report added.

So, in other words, the Secret Service did not even bother to facilitate the most basic of basic communication.

Nor did they bother to record it, which was another standard protocol flagrantly disregarded.

“The Secret Service did not record its radio communications … The absence of radio logs or recordings significantly limits the ability to reconstruct events or either investigative or evaluative purposes,” the report continued.

Which may well be by design.

Rather humorously, in a dark way, the report also noted that employees with “little to no experience” apparently were tasked with “significant responsibility.”

“Secret Service personnel with little to no experience in advance planning roles were given significant responsibility,” the report asserted.

So, in other words, DEI types were in charge. That’s great.

Which is no doubt why the report reached a rather clear conclusion that neatly summed up all the events of that day.

“The Task Force found that the tragic and shocking events in Butler, Pennsylvania were preventable and should not have happened,” the report declared.

Without a doubt.

And, to this day, it is rather strange to observe just how much evidence regarding Trump’s would-be assassin remains missing.

Author: Ofelia Thornton


Most Popular

These content links are provided by Content.ad. Both Content.ad and the web site upon which the links are displayed may receive compensation when readers click on these links. Some of the content you are redirected to may be sponsored content. View our privacy policy here.

To learn how you can use Content.ad to drive visitors to your content or add this service to your site, please contact us at [email protected].

Family-Friendly Content

Website owners select the type of content that appears in our units. However, if you would like to ensure that Content.ad always displays family-friendly content on this device, regardless of what site you are on, check the option below. Learn More



Most Popular
Sponsored Content

These content links are provided by Content.ad. Both Content.ad and the web site upon which the links are displayed may receive compensation when readers click on these links. Some of the content you are redirected to may be sponsored content. View our privacy policy here.

To learn how you can use Content.ad to drive visitors to your content or add this service to your site, please contact us at [email protected].

Family-Friendly Content

Website owners select the type of content that appears in our units. However, if you would like to ensure that Content.ad always displays family-friendly content on this device, regardless of what site you are on, check the option below. Learn More