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The tree line at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, has been known for years to be a vantage point for photographers looking to catch a candid glimpse of the former president and other VIPs.

Still, suspected failed assassin Ryan Wesley Routh was able to camp out there for nearly 12 hours Sunday with a rifle aimed at the course, according to a federal affidavit. He even brought snacks.

A Secret Service agent patrolling the perimeter eventually spotted the gunman and opened fire, chasing him off before anyone was hurt. But local authorities say additional perimeter patrols would be an obvious safety upgrade when Donald Trump comes to town.

Trump is known to frequent the course when staying at his Mar-a-Lago resort about 15 minutes away. And even though the visit wasn’t on the president’s schedule, anyone staking out the area could have been tipped off to his arrival by his motorcade.

“There have been previous individuals who have taken pictures of the former president while he’s golfing,” said Dave Aronberg, the state attorney for the 15th Judicial Circuit, which covers Palm Beach County. “They’ve gone through the shrubs and been able to poke a camera through the fencing. You would think that perhaps maybe they would consider someone scoping the perimeter.”

Photographers routinely announce their presence to the Secret Service and are well versed in where they can get a good line of sight, the New York Post reported. They are rarely asked to leave, an unnamed photo agency source told the paper.

Fox News’ Michael Ruiz and Julia Bonavita contributed to this report.

Trump’s first campaign event since second assassination attempt to be town hall in key battleground

Former President Trump will host a town hall event in Flint, Michigan, on Tuesday, the first campaign event since the latest attempt on his life.

Trump will be at Flint’s Dort Financial Center on Tuesday evening for a town hall-style event, where he is expected to take questions from the audience and focus remarks on the auto industry and inflation.

The event comes just two days after Trump survived a second assassination attempt, this time while playing golf at Trump National Golf Club in Florida on Sunday.

Trump’s Flint town hall will be moderated by Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who is expected to take on a larger role in campaigning for the former president in the homestretch of the campaign.

The event comes as the campaigns are now within the last 50 days of the election, with both candidates scrambling to solidify support ahead of November. Michigan figures to play a key role for both Trump and his opponent, Vice President Harris, being one of the swing states most likely to turn the election in either candidate’s favor.

According to the Real Clear Politics polling average, Harris currently holds a slight lead over Trump in the state with an average of 48.3% support to Trump’s 47.6%.

Read the full article by Fox News’ Michael Lee.

Assassination attempt suspect’s possible ‘personal vendetta’ among investigators’ 4 key questions

Now that alleged would-be Trump assassin Ryan Routh is in custody, the FBI and Florida police will have their hands full unraveling his planning process and what may have motivated him.

Former NYPD investigator and security expert Patrick Brosnan told Fox News Digital that investigators will need to trawl through a litany of information in the coming weeks, including “all things cellular, online shopping; phone camera images, bank records, email correspondence, recent search engine inquiries, dating app activity, identification of any possible burner phones, footage from … city streets, UPS trucks, Amazon trucks or backup cameras, and all cell tower pings within a fixed distance.”

Using this information, investigators will build Routh’s profile to answer these questions, according to Gene Petrino, a SWAT commander with nearly three decades in law enforcement and a master’s degree in security management.

1. Did Ryan Wesley Routh act alone?

2. What was Routh’s motive?

3. How did Routh come into possession of a firearm?

4. How did Routh know where to lie in wait?

Read the full article by Fox News’  Christina Coulter.

Trump assassination attempt suspect’s ex-neighbor says family was ‘weird,’ kept ‘horse in the house’

Failed Trump assassination attempt suspect Ryan Routh has a lengthy arrest record in Guilford County, North Carolina, where he was once a resident of Greensboro.

Routh’s arrest record in Guilford County spans between the 1980s and 2010, and his charges range from writing multiple bad checks to felony firearm possession, possession of a stolen vehicle and multiple counts of possession of a weapon of mass destruction in 2002, specifically, a “binary explosive with a 10-in[ch] detonation cord and a blasting cap.”

A neighbor who said she had known Routh for about 18 years, before he moved to Hawaii and left his Greensboro home empty at least a year ago, described his family as “weird” to reporters outside her home next to Routh’s former North Carolina residence.

“He had a horse in the house. I mean, a whole live horse in the house. But I could see the guns and stuff and all. They were … oh, I mean, kind of weird. But they didn’t bother me. I didn’t bother them,” Kim Mungo said.

“I told all my friends because they didn’t believe me,” Mungo added.

She said the family never expressed any strong political views.

Read the full article by Fox News’ Audrey Conklin.

Timeline of 2nd failed assassination attempt on Trump; suspect Ryan Routh developed rage, radicalism

Former President Trump survived a second assassination attempt in just two months over the weekend after the U.S. Secret Service opened fire on an armed man near a fence as the billionaire candidate golfed in Florida.

Police recovered an SKS rifle that the suspect allegedly aimed through a fence at the edge of the course.

But as additional details about the suspect emerge, he appears to be a radical activist incensed by geopolitical conflict and a repeat offender with a violent felony conviction to match his ideological online posts, which are under investigation by the FBI.

In the years before his arrest on Sunday, suspect Ryan Wesley Routh had dozens of run-ins with the law and was outspoken on political issues, particularly the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Read the full article on the timeline of the second assassination attempt by Fox News’ Michael Ruiz.

Trump Media shares slip after second assassination attempt on former president

Shares of Trump Media and Technology Group fell in choppy action
on Monday, a day after another would-be assassin made an attempt on the life of former President Trump, who is the majority shareholder.

The stock was down nearly 4% at $17.30 per share in afternoon trade.

The slump comes after shares of Trump Media, which owns Truth Social, surged as much as 30% on Friday and closed up 12% after the former president told the press he would not sell his shares in the firm and that he would not leave the social media platform.

Trump owns about 57% of Trump Media, which also saw its shares slump last week following his televised debate with Democratic rival Vice President Kamala Harris after weeks of steady declines ahead of key dates this month when Trump and other company insiders will be allowed to sell their shares.

Trump Media saw its value balloon to nearly $10 billion following its stock market listing in March. Trump Media’s stock is popular among retail traders and is seen as a speculative bet on his chances of securing a second four-year term as president.

However, since its listing, Trump Media shares have lost most of their value, with losses accelerating in recent weeks after President Biden gave up his re-election bid and Trump lost a lead in opinion polls ahead of the Nov. 5 presidential election.

Fox Business’ Breck Dumas contributed to this report.

It feels like we’re having the same conversation we had five weeks ago: Eric Trump

Eric Trump, son of former President Trump
, told Fox News’ Sean Hannity that it feels like déjà vu after his father survived a second assassination attempt and that it feels like he was having the same conversation he had in July, when the former president survived his first assassination attempt.

Sunny Hostin horrified by poll that found millions of Americans support violence to stop Trump

“The View” co-host Sunny Hostin highlighted the results of a poll released in July that found 10% of Americans support violence against Donald Trump, which she said was “despicable,” following a second assassination attempt against the former president.

“I am so saddened and disturbed by the fact that political violence is so normalized in this country,” Hostin said. “There is more support for violence today against Trump and others, against Trump, 10% of American adults think it’s OK,” suggesting that meant tens of millions of Americans would support such conduct.

The poll, released by the University of Chicago via the Chicago Project on Security and Threats, found that 26 million Americans believe “the use of force” is justified to keep Trump from regaining the presidency. Of the 26 million, the poll found, nine million have guns, and 22 million have access to “internet organizational tools.”

“That’s despicable,” added Hostin, who is a fierce critic of the president and strong supporter of Kamala Harris. The suspect in the second assassination attempt against Trump, Ryan Wesely Routh, was arrested Sunday afternoon after authorities spotted a rifle barrel poking out of shrubbery on the West Palm Beach golf course where Trump was playing.

The same survey found about 7% of respondents said force was justified to restore Trump to the presidency.

Hostin cited other instances of political violence, including against Nancy Pelosi’s husband Paul in 2022, and said it happened on both sides of the aisle.

Fox News’ Hanna Panreck contributed to this report.

Assassination attempt a ‘confluence’ of GOP rhetoric and ‘availability of assault rifles’: Dem Rep.

Rep. Mikie Sherrill, D-N.J., said on Monday
how the second assassination attempt against former President Trump was a “confluence” of Republican “misinformation” and “fear-mongering” alongside the “complete availability of assault rifles.”

Sherrill spoke to CNN’s Jim Acosta one day after Secret Service agents successfully thwarted the assassination attempt at Trump International Golf Club, opening fire on the suspect who was later taken into custody.

Although Sherrill acknowledged the Secret Service needed to do more to protect Trump, she linked the attempted assassination to the GOP.

“I think we also have to address some underlying issues that are going on here as well. This really seems to be the confluence of two very bad things going on in the Republican Party,” Sherrill said.

She added, “On one side, the attempts to divide, to enrage the population, to put out false rumors and misinformation. We know the mayor in Springfield is begging the Republican Party to stop with the false information on immigrants. They have portions of the town on lockdown at this point, and an increase in all of the partisanship and the fear-mongering that’s going on.”

“And then on the other side, we have this complete availability of assault rifles, too. It seems almost anyone who wants to have access. So how did this man, who already had some convictions for barricading himself with a weapon, have access to weapons of war that I was trained on when I was in the military?” Merrill asked.

Fox News’ Lindsay Kornick contributed to this report.

Trump golf partner said he was ‘stoic,’ ‘courageous’ in face of assassination attempt

Steve Witkoff, a real estate developer and close friend of former President Trump, described the chaotic moments during a failed assassination attempt on the president’s life on Sunday as both men played a round of golf.

Witkoff was with Trump when a U.S. Secret Service agent spotted someone with a firearm in a treeline near the course and opened fire, authorities said. Despite the chaos, Trump remained “stoic,” and “courageous,” he said.

Witkoff was walking with Trump on the golf course when they heard gunshots.

“I actually feel blessed that I was there yesterday,” Witkoff told “Hannity.” “And the reason I feel blessed, Sean, is that I got to see what it’s like for my dear friend to live his normal life. His normal life, which is punctuated by two attempts to assassinate him in the last 60 days, being vilified since he left the presidency, falsely accused, harassed.”

He said the Secret Service acted heroically and that sniper teams deployed next to him with tripods and aiming their weapons, Witkoff said.

“Each and every one of them put themselves in harm’s way, to put themselves in between the shooter and the president,” he said. “I was standing up. As I said to this day, I say to this minute, I don’t know why I continue to stand.”

The suspect didn’t fire any shots and Trump was never in his line of sight, Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe said Monday. Witkoff praised Trump’s realtime reaction to the incident, saying he felt inspired.

“He’s so courageous that it, you know, you feel inspired that you want… you want to demonstrate a little bit of that yourself if you can,” Witkoff added.

“I have a little love thing for my dear friend and I say to myself thank God that he was not injured or more or killed,” he added. “And thank God none of the other people. The there were plenty of civilians, by the way, staffers from his office, people who care about him just as much as I do to other friends of his. So there could have been a lot of really serious damage out there.” 

Trump says Biden was ‘very nice’ on call after assassination attempt

Former President Trump, during a X Spaces appearance Monday, said President Biden was “very nice” during a brief phone call between the two following another assassination attempt on Trump.

“He was very nice today. They called me to make sure I was okay, to make sure that, you know, do I have any suggestions or [whether] we do need more people on my details because we have 50 to 60,000 people showing up to events,” Trump said.

The White House said earlier Monday that Trump and Biden had had a “cordial” conversation and that the president “conveyed his relief.”

Trump recounts assassination attempt in X Spaces appearance, commends Secret Service

Former President Trump spoke on X Spaces Monday evening, after surviving yet another assassination attempt in two months.

The Republican presidential candidate commended the “excellent job” of the Secret Service and authorities who have put a “very dangerous person” behind bars.

Trump said he was on the golf course with some friends when “we heard shots being fired in the air and I guess probably four or five … bullets.”

Trump said he and his companions were whisked away in golf carts by the Secret Service.

“I would have loved to take that last putt but we decided, ‘let’s get out of here,’” Trump quipped.

Trump noted that the suspected gunman – later identified as 58-year-old Ryan Routh – never managed to fire a shot, and ran across the street before hopping in a car.

“And amazingly, a civilian in that area saw something and it looked very suspicious. And in the car drove the car to the back of his truck of some kind. And took pictures of the license plate, gave him to the sheriff’s office,” Trump said.

The Republican candidate blamed the second assassination attempt on divisive rhetoric from Democrats and “the radical left.”

JD Vance calls for toning down political rhetoric after 2nd Trump assassination attempt

Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, on Monday called for the nation to tone down the political rhetoric after former President Trump survived yet another assassination attempt.

In a lengthy post on X, Vance commended the Republican presidential candidate “for calling for peace and calm” but argued that the “rhetoric is out of control.”

“It nearly got Donald Trump killed twice,” Vance wrote, arguing that Democrats would be much more fired up if he was revealed that the suspect had been a Republican donor.

“This seems to be a double standard but at a deep level, it is entirely consistent,” Vance said.

The VP nominee pledged to “vigorously defend” free speech – even that which criticizes himself and his running mate, Donald J. Trump.

“But when I ask you to ‘tone down the rhetoric’ it’s not about being nice – our citizens have right to be mean, even if I don’t like it – or empty platitudes,” Vance said. “Instead, I’m asking all of us to reject censorship. Reject the idea that you can control what other people think and say. Embrace persuasion of your fellow citizens over silencing them–either through the powers of Big Tech or through moral blackmail.”

Vance ended the post arguing that rejecting censorship means rejecting political violence, while embracing censorship means embracing violence “on its behalf.”

“The reason is simple,” Vance said. “The logic of censorship leads directly to one place, for there is only one way to permanently silence a human being: put a bullet in his brain.”

Ron DeSantis promises Florida will investigate Trump assassination attempt, throws shade on FBI, DOJ

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Monday reiterated his state would conduct its own investigation into the second assassination attempt on former President Trump.

Speaking with Fox News’ Jesse Watters, the Republican governor said the people of Florida deserve to know the truth about where the suspect came from and what his motivations were.

“I don’t think it’s in the best interests of this country to say that agencies like the FBI and the DOJ – which are trying to prosecute Trump in South Florida; they’re on appeal at the 11th Circuit to reinstate an indictment that had been dismissed – that they’re the best people to … give us the truth about this, this defendant, but also prosecute the case where they don’t have as strong of jurisdictional claims.”

DeSantis said fence line of the golf course where authorities said a suspect pointed an SKS-style rifle at the Republican presidential candidate “is clearly the biggest point of vulnerability on that course.”

“If you’re burrowed into … shrubs, you have a pretty clear line of sigh on a number of golf holes,” DeSantis said.

The governor then criticized Democrats for what he deemed their lack of sympathy over the second assassination attempt on the former president in two months.

“They’re just all out with the rhetoric all over again,” DeSantis said. “There’s a lot of people in our society who may have a screw loose. And if you’re constantly telling them that American democracy is going to end, if this guy gets elected president, well, somebody is going to feel that they’re justified for doing this. And so I do think the apocalyptic rhetoric has increased the threats to Donald Trump. No question about.”

Top Ohio newspaper runs letter to editor saying Trump brought assassination attempts on himself

One of Ohio’s most prominent newspapers published a letter to the editor blaming former President Trump for the assassination attempts that have occurred against him, saying he “brings a lot of this stuff on himself.”

Cincinnati’s The Enquirer, part of the Gannett-owned USA Today Network of newspapers, ran a letter penned by a woman from the suburb of Sharonville.

“There is no place in politics for violence. That said, the former president, Donald Trump, brings a lot of this stuff on himself,” the Sharonville resident wrote in her letter.

“When he continues to push lies about legal immigrants like the ones in Springfield, Ohio; when he continues to insist he was not the loser of the 2020 election; when he continues to spout how he wants to use our military to ‘round up’ and deport immigrants who are not White from this country, he brings the crazies out, and one of those crazies tries to shoot him,” the letter continues.

The woman then suggested that the costs and resources to put up the Secret Service at Trump’s properties are a factor in the near misses on the former president’s life.

“One thing Trump can do to reduce the chance that one of these crazies will attempt to assassinate him is to stop charging the American people thousands of dollars per night for his Secret Service protectors to stay at his Trump-owned properties, as reported by NPR and other news outlets. (I am sure each agent has their own room, too.)” the woman said. “Those excess monies can then be used to put more Secret Service agents on his protection detail. Otherwise, why should the American people continue to put out extra millions for protection that is only needed because the former president can’t keep from lying and bringing these issues on himself?”

Read the full article on the letter to the editor by Joseph A. Wulfsohn.

Vance recounts getting call from Trump after second assassination attempt: ‘Fazed by nothing’

Sen. JD Vance on Monday recounted getting the phone call from former President Trump minutes after surviving yet another assassination attempt.

Speaking at the Faith and Freedom gathering in Cobb County, Georgia Monday, Trump’s running mate said he was at home in Cincinnati, Ohio with his kids when he got the call.

“So, I answer and he says, ‘JD, you’re not going to believe this, but they tried to do it again,’” Vance recounted of their conversation.

The Republican VP nominee said that Trump told him he was mad because he “was about to make a birdie putt on the sixth hole, and they wouldn’t let me finish.”

“That is the kind of guy that you want to be president of the United States, right? Who’s fazed by nothing,” Vance said. “I think I was, without question, bothered by it more than he was.”

Vance told the audience to take the opportunity “to call for a reduction in the ridicule and inflammatory political rhetoric coming from too many corners of our politics.”

“Look, we can disagree with one another. We can debate one another, but we cannot tell the American people that one candidate is a fascist and if he is elected, it is going to be the end of American Democracy,” Vance said. 

Trump too predictable, suspect ‘played the odds,’ former Secret Service special agent says

Former President Trump
is “far too predictable” in his movements, a former U.S. Secret Service special agent said.

Trump wasn’t slated to play a round of golf on Sunday when his life was in danger for a second time in two months, Charles Marino, a former Secret Service agent and former Homeland Security adviser told “Special Report” host Brett Baier.

“The former president is far too predictable. And what we saw here was a suspect that played the odds,” Marino said. “He camped out for over 12 hours and he played the odds that the president was going to show up and know what he did. And the secret’s out of the bag.”

Trump made an unannounced trip to play golf where the suspect allegedly waited for him to appear, authorities said Monday.

“When former presidents show up, you see the increased police presence, the Secret Service motorcade,” Marino said. “So he knew that he got it right and he waited for a chance to attack.”

Police release 2010 mugshot of Trump assassination suspect who’s had multiple brushes with the law

Fox News Digital has obtained an old mugshot of the suspect in the second assassination bid attempt of former President Trump.

The mugshot shows a 2010 booking photo of the suspect, Ryan Wesley Routh, in the custody of the Guildford County Sheriff’s Office in North Carolina.

The FBI said Monday that Routh has numerous brushes with the law between 1997 and 2010. The 2010 mugshot is for multiple counts of stolen goods.

Special Agent in Charge Jeffrey Veltri said Routh was the subject of a closed investigation in 2019 when someone reported he was in possession of a firearm despite a prior felony conviction, but Veltri said the tipster would not confirm making the report.

Blumenthal says it’s “absurd” that Trump is blaming Harris rhetoric for assassination attempts

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said it was “cravenly absurd” for former President Trump to blame Vice President Harris for the alleged attempt on his life for the second time in as many months.

“Blatantly cravenly absurd. Misleading,” Blumenthal told Fox News. “And it does a disservice to the Secret Service, which is trying to improve the way it provides protection and it must improve the way it provides protection.”

“So I think that it distracts from the essential purpose,” he added.

On Monday, Trump blamed Harris for rhetoric he said has “taken politics in our Country to a whole new level of Hatred, Abuse, and Distrust.”

Blumenthal said Trump’s rhetoric evokes emotion and strong views that may present challenges to the U.S. Secret Service, who are charged with protecting the former president.

“The Secret Service has a job to do. And if it needs more resources, it has an obligation to request it,” Blumenthal said. “But I think that the failures that we found in the lapses that have been revealed go beyond simply resources, how the resources are used and how accountability is imposed.”

Sen. Marsha Blackburn calls 2 assassination attempts in 2 months ‘Unfathomable and unacceptable’

Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., on Monday sent a letter to U.S. Secret Service Acting Director Ronald Rowe urging the agency to provide former President Trump with the same level of protection that it provides for sitting presidents after the Republican candidate survived his second assassination attempt in just over two months.

“While we are still awaiting more details about this horrific event, I am thankful that the perpetrator was unsuccessful and the Secret Service agent acted swiftly to ensure that the former president is safe,” Blackburn said. “But one thing is abundantly clear: within the span of a mere two months, there have been two assassination attempts against a major presidential candidate and former president in the United States of America. It is unfathomable and unacceptable that this incident occurred.”

Though Trump had had his security enhanced following the July 13 assassination attempt, Blackburn argued that it was “still not enough to prevent an unimaginable second assassination attempt.”

Blackburn will participate in a press conference on Tuesday to discuss the need for Trump to have an increase in Secret Service protection.

Donald Trump to attend Alabama-Georgia rivalry game in Tuscaloosa this month: report

Former President Trump will be on hand for one of the most anticipated college football matchups in Week 5, according to political commentator Mark Halperin.

Trump, the Republican candidate in this year’s presidential election, heads to Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa to watch the No. 4 Alabama Crimson Tide take on the No. 2 Georgia Bulldogs on Sept. 28.

Both the Crimson Tide and Bulldogs are undefeated, making this early SEC rivalry game a big one in terms of polling and College Football Playoff implications.

This is also a significant appearance for Trump because it will come almost two weeks after the Secret Service opened fire on a concealed suspect who appeared to be aiming a rifle at the former president at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida.

The suspect, Ryan Wesley Routh, fled the scene on Sunday, but Florida law enforcement soon arrested him after surrounding his vehicle on Interstate 95.

He is being charged in federal court with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon as well as possession of a firearm with an obliterated serial number, with more charges expected.

A public appearance of this magnitude, at a stadium expecting thousands to show up for the signature SEC matchup, poses a potential security problem for the Secret Service.

However, this isn’t the first time Trump will watch some football in Tuscaloosa. While he was president in 2019, Trump attended the Alabama-LSU game in November, a thriller in which the Tigers defeated the Crimson Tide on the road, 46-41.

Read the full article about Trump attending the college football game by Scott Thompson. 

Breaking News

Trump and Biden have a ‘cordial conversation’ after second assassination attempt: White House

President Biden has spoken with former President Trump following a second assassination attempt on the Republican candidate, the White House confirmed Monday.

White House Senior Deputy Press Secretary Emilie Simons said the president has “conveyed his relief” that Trump is safe.

“The two shared a cordial conversation and former President Trump expressed his thanks for the call,” Simons wrote in a post on X.

Earlier Monday, Biden condemned the assassination attempt, and praised the Secret Service for their “expert handling of the situation.”

“In America, we resolve our differences peacefully at the ballot box, not at the end of a gun,” Biden said. “America has suffered too many times at the tragedy of an assassin’s bullet. It solved nothing and just tears the country apart.”

Rowe says Secret Service has done more with less for decades

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe praised his agents for their response to the second assassination attempt on former President Trump, saying his agency has tackled a series of challenges in the past two months despite limited resources.

Rowe noted that more resources are needed to keep the agency charged with protecting the president and many others at the top of its game.

“The Secret Service operates under a paradox of zero failed missions, but also, that we have done more with less for decades,” he said. “We have immediate needs right now and we have great support.”

After the first attempt on Trump’s life in July during a Butler, Pennsylvania, campaign rally, Rowe ordered a shift, focusing on the Secret Service’s methodology.

He noted the agency needs more funding for new hires and additional training.

“You can’t just give me funding and say ‘Hey, we’re going to make sure that everybody gets overtime,’” said Rowe. “Because the men and women of the Secret Service right now, we are redlining them. And they are rising to this moment and they are meeting the challenges right now.”

He cited the past two months in which agents have helped secure the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, a visit by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Washington and West Palm Beach, Florida, and last week’s presidential debate between Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris.

“Our folks are rising to this moment but it requires all of us to be able to have good conversations and make sure that we’re getting the Secret Service where it needs to be,” Rowe said.

Second Trump assassination attempt suspect didn’t fire, had no line of sight, authorities say

The suspect accused of trying to assassinate former President Trump as he was golfing in Florida didn’t fire any shots and didn’t have a line of sight, authorities said Monday.

The suspect accused of trying to assassinate former President Trump as he was golfing in Florida didn’t fire any shots and didn’t have a line of sight on the former president, authorities said Monday.

A U.S. Secret Service agent was sweeping an area when they saw Ryan Wesley Routh, 58, armed with what he believed was a firearm and opened fire, acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe said during a news conference.

“The subject, who did not have line of sight to the former president, fled the scene,” Rowe said. “He did not fire or get off any shots at our agents.”

Routh was arrested a short time later and Trump was evacuated to a safe location, Rowe said.

County sheriff says Trump assassination bid suspect was ‘very poised, in control of himself’

Martin County Sheriff William Snyder joined Fox News’ “America Reports” Monday to recount the moments leading up to the arrest of the suspect in the second assassination attempt of former President Trump.

Snyder described the moment as “tense” as deputies made what they believed would be the “highest profile stop” in the history of the Martin County Sheriff’s office.

Asked what the suspect, Ryan Routh, was like when deputies apprehended him, Snyder described him as “very poised” and “very in control of himself.”

“Even though we had armed deputies all over the place – probably 30 deputies out there – rifles, helicopter overhead, both north and south on I-95 shutdown, he was just in the middle of it all. Never asked, ‘hey, what’s this about?’” Snyder said. “And when I saw that, I realized he knew what time it was. He knew that the gig was up, and he was caught.”

Breaking News

Second Trump assassination bid suspect was subject of 2019 FBI tip

The FBI said Monday that the suspect in the second assassination attempt of former President Trump was the subject of a 2019 tip to the FBI.

The new information was revealed during a Monday afternoon presser by Special Agent in Charge Jeffrey B Veltri.

“Following up on the tip, the alleged complainant was interviewed and … did not verify providing the initial information. The FBI passed that information to local law enforcement in Honolulu,” Veltri said.

Veltri said the Martin County Sheriff’s Office took custody of the suspect, 58-year-old Ryan Routh, and he was transported back to Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office,” Veltri said.

“Our FBI agents then attempted to interview him, and he invoked his right to an attorney,” Veltri said.

Veltri said agents have obtained a video recording device, cellular devices, a vehicle, and other electronic devices located at previous known addresses while executing search warrants.

The FBI’s Honolulu and Charlotte field offices have initiated interviews of several family members and former colleagues of the suspect.

Veltri said the FBI’s Evidence Response Team is collecting and processing multiple evidentiary items, including an SKS rifle with a scope, the subject’s electronics, and ceramic tiles.

“We’re continuing to conduct analysis, and we’ll be compiling the subjects movements in the days and months leading up to September 15th, Veltri said.

Veltri said the suspect had an “active online presence” and the bureau is going through what he posted and any searches he conducted online.

Veltri said that the suspect had been charged and convicted in 2002 in North Carolina for possession of a weapon of mass destruction. Law enforcement checks also revealed that from 1997 to 2010 the suspect had “numerous felony charges for stolen good.”

The FBI does not have information indicating that Routh acted with anyone else, Veltri said.

Security at Mar-A-Lago ‘highest it can possibly be,’ sheriff says

The security level at former President Trump’s Florida residence is the highest it can be, authorities said Monday.

Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw said road closures near the golf course where his life was in danger Sunday were expected to be in place until sometime Tuesday.

“The security level at Mar-A-Lago is the highest it can possibly be,” he said during a news conference.

The FBI is investigating the matter as an assassination attempt on Trump, the second in as many months

McConnell says second attempt on Trump’s life is a ‘soul-searching’ moment for Americans

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said the second assassination attempt of former President Trump over the weekend should be a moment of “soul searching” for all Americans.

Speaking on the Senate floor, McConnell said he was dismayed to hear of the incident.

“It’s dismaying to begin another week with news of an assassination attempt against a former president,” he said. “We certainly are all grateful once again, at the worst, outcome was avoided. This ought to be a moment of soul-searching for all Americans. It’s your time to reflect on the ways that our political process has been injected by reprehensible violence.”

He added that democracy flows from the ballot box, not from the barrel of a gun.

“In the meantime, for the second time in as many months, law enforcement faces an even more urgent task completing a thorough, swift and transparent investigation into the circumstances of yesterday’s close call,” McConnell said. “The American people deserve answers. They deserve assurances that a former president who tens of millions of Americans have nominated once again, will receive every appropriate measure of security, and they ought to receive them without delay.”

Task force member says Trump’s Secret Service detail can’t take ‘cookie-cutter approach’

U.S. Rep. Mike Waltz, R-Fla., a member of the bipartisan task force investigating July’s assassination attempt of former President Trump, questioned why there wasn’t an increase in the Secret Service detail for him on Sunday when his life was in danger for a second time.

Waltz said that acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe told lawmakers that President Biden, back in July, called for Trump and Vice President Harris to have the same level of maximum protection.

“Clearly, the agents responded appropriately, as did the agents on July 13th,” Waltz told “America Reports” on Monday. “But there was a breakdown in terms of the perimeter and how that was established. And I think there’s a bigger issue here that I’ve talked to acting Secret Service Director Rowe about and I think the committee needs to take a hard look at. And that’s how the Secret Service allocates its resources. It’s kind of stuck in this paradigm.”

“You’re a sitting president and vice president,” he added. “You get this, you’re a former and you get that.”

The suspect targeting Trump at his Florida golf course was arrested and the Secret Service has been commended for its quick response.

Waltz said the agency needs to base its allocation of resources based on the severity of threats against the protectees, not a “cookie-cutter approach.”

Rowe said he wasn’t aware of why Trump’s security detail may not have been the maximum level of protection,” the congressman said.

“They’ve beefed it up dramatically,” said Waltz. “And they have. Anybody who’s traveled with the president can see that. But clearly, there are some kind of either a protocol disconnect or still a resource disconnect. And then the other piece is he’s saying, you know, they’re maxed out.”

“He also briefed us, between all these details, the U.N
. and the meetings Biden’s having this weekend, they’re completely maxed. But when I and others talk to agents, they’re saying, look, there’s agents available. They want to travel, they want the overtime. And so those are also disconnects that the task force has got to get the bottom up.”   

Schumer: Congress prepared to give Secret Service more resources after Trump assassination attempt

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer
on Monday said lawmakers were prepared to give the U.S. Secret Service more resources following the second assassination attempt on former President Trump over the weekend.

“I will say what I have said many times before, there is no place in America for political violence of any kind. I’m glad the former president is safe, and I applaud the Secret Service and all first responders for acting quickly before anyone got hurt,” Schumer said Monday.

Schumer called for the suspect to be prosecuted “to the fullest extent of the law.”

“We all must do our part to ensure an incident like this does not happen again. This means that Congress has a responsibility to ensure the Secret Service and all law enforcement have the resources they need to do their jobs,” Schumer said. “So, as we continue the appropriations process, if the Secret Service is in need of more resources, we are prepared to [provide] it for them.”

GOP lawmaker says Secret Service left Trump in ‘grave danger’

Rep. Pat Fallon, R-Texas, on Monday said he believes the U.S. Secret Service left former President Trump in “grave danger” after he narrowly survived yet another assassination attempt.

Appearing on “America Reports” Monday, Fallon, a member of the Task Force on the Attempted Assassination of Former President Donald Trump, criticized zealots for spreading divisive rhetoric and the left for “emotionally” driving supporters to the polls.

Fallon said he has been advocating for Trump to get the same level of protection as the sitting president.

“[Trump] is a former president, but he’s also the leading candidate to be president and he’s under threat from a foreign nation state for actions he took to protect the country while he was president. So, Donald Trump’s a very unique individual,” Fallon said.

The GOP lawmaker said he’s heard from whistleblowers close to the Secret Service who’ve said they need to allocate resources more effectively.

“But they have 8,000 employees and $3 billion budget. They have to have known extra money was needed in Butler to mitigate the PR complex,” Fallon said, referring to the first assassination on Trump during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13. “They just didn’t do it, and they didn’t do it. And they left President Trump in grave danger.” 

AG Garland says he is ‘grateful’ Trump is safe

U.S. Attorney General
Merrick Garland said multiple agencies were investigating a second assassination attempt on former President Trump over the weekend.

“We are grateful the former President is safe,” Garland said in a statement.

“The FBI is continuing to investigate what appears to be an assassination attempt of former President Trump that occurred yesterday in Florida,” he added. “The entire Justice Department — including the FBI, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida, and the National Security Division — is coordinating closely with our law enforcement partners on the ground.”

Garland said investigators will “work tirelessly to ensure accountability, and we will bring every available resource to bear in this investigation.” 

Trump thanks Secret Service, law enforcement for response to second assassination attempt

Former President Trump thanked the U.S. Secret Service and local law enforcement following a second attempt on his life in a two-month span.

Trump took to X on Monday to thank everyone for their concern and well wishes following the incident at Trump’s golf course in West Palm Beach, Florida.

“It was certainly an interesting day!” he wrote. “Most importantly, I want to thank the U.S. Secret Service, (Palm Beach County) Sheriff Ric Bradshaw and his Office of brave and dedicated Patriots, and, all of Law Enforcement, for the incredible job done today at Trump International in keeping me, as the 45th President of the United States, and the Republican Nominee in the upcoming Presidential Election, SAFE. THE JOB DONE WAS ABSOLUTELY OUTSTANDING. I AM VERY PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN!”

The suspect, identified as Ryan Wesley Routh, appeared in court Monday in West Palm Beach and is charged with federal gun crimes.

Trump was shot in July during a campaign rally in Pennsylvania. The suspected gunman was killed by Secret Service agents who returned fire.

The agency has been heavily criticized in the weeks since over security lapses that could have prevented the shooting.

Donald Trump Jr. says explaining assassination attempt on kids’ grandfather is ‘getting really old’

Donald Trump Jr. on Monday lamented having to have conversations with his children about yet another assassination attempt on their grandfather, former President Donald Trump.

“You know what’s getting really old? Having to have conversations with my 5 young children about radical leftist[s] trying to kill their grandfather,” Trump Jr. wrote on X Monday morning. “No person should ever have to do this in America or anywhere else and yet I had to have that conversation five times again yesterday.”

The tweet comes a day after a suspect was arrested in an attempted assassination of the Republican presidential candidate in Florida.

The suspect, identified as 58-year-old Ryan Routh, was captured moments later on northbound Interstate 95 after deputies surrounded his vehicle.

Alleged Trump gunman Ryan Routh has a paper trail of pro-Ukraine advocacy: reports

The alleged gunman arrested at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, has a lengthy paper trail of pro-Ukraine advocacy, according to several news reports Monday.

The suspect, Ryan Wesley Routh, 58, was arrested Sunday after allegedly pushing the muzzle of an assault rifle through a chain-link fence near former President Donald Trump’s golf course, where the former president was playing the fifth hole. However, this is not the first time Routh has been identified.

Routh is a pro-Ukraine activist who has spent time in the Eastern European country volunteering to raise more support for the nation’s military efforts and even sought Afghan veterans who fled from the Taliban to fight in the war, a New York Times report noted.

He was also interviewed by Semafor in March 2023 and expressed frustration at the Ukranian government for having too much red tape around admitting foreign soldiers to fight in the war.

“Ukraine is very often hard to work with. Many foreign soldiers leave after a week in Ukraine or must move from unit to unit to find a place they are respected and appreciated,” Routh told Semafor, adding that he’d been “yelled at” for suggesting Afghan veterans.

“They’re afraid that anybody and everybody is a Russian spy,” he said.

Routh also talked to Newsweek’s Romania edition in 2022, again about his recruitment efforts for the International Legion Defense of Ukraine, which is an on-the-ground unit for the nation’s army.

Read the full article about alleged Trump gunman Ryan Routh by Jamie Joseph. 

Biden praises Secret Service for ‘expert handling’ of Trump assassination attempt

President Biden condemned the assassination attempt against former President Trump on Monday during his first public appearance since the incident.

Biden reiterated his statement that there is “no place” for political violence in America.

“I commend the Secret Service
for their expert handling of the situation, that the former president was protected from harm and that the suspect is in custody,” Biden said.

“In America, we resolve our differences peacefully at the ballot box, not at the end of a gun,” he continued. “America has suffered too many times at the tragedy of an assassin’s bullet. It solved nothing and just tears the country apart.”

“We must do everything we can to prevent it, and never give it any oxygen,” he added.

The statement came hours after Trump himself blamed the “rhetoric” from the Biden-Harris administration for inspiring the attempts on his life.

“He believed the rhetoric of Biden and Harris, and he acted on it,” Trump said of the alleged gunman, Ryan Wesley Routh, in an interview with Fox News Digital. “Their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at, when I am the one who is going to save the country, and they are the ones that are destroying the country — both from the inside and out.” 

Neighbors ‘were afraid’ of alleged would-be Trump assassin

Neighbors of suspect Ryan Wesley Routh in North Carolina say they were “afraid” of the alleged would-be Trump assassin, according to reports.

Routh, allegedly attempted to kill former President Trump while he was golfing this weekend, has most recently lived in Hawaii but lived in Greensboro, North Carolina prior to that.

One neighbor, a woman, spoke with FOX8 on condition of anonymity, telling the outlet that she has known Routh for roughly 20 years.

“Him, I mean, trying to shoot Trump. That’s a lot. I would have never guessed, and I would have swore up and down, no, that’s not him,” she said. “… I just can’t believe it. I mean, if I didn’t see it with my own eyes, I mean the pictures and stuff and all, then I wouldn’t be able to believe that.”

She went on to say that she was familiar with Routh owning firearms, saying some neighbors had been intimidated.

“I’ve seen the guns myself and all, and, yeah, they had a lot of guns and stuff over there, and, yeah, a lot of people were afraid of him back in the day,” she said.

Routh is charged with federal gun crimes and currently in federal custody.

Trump’s failed assassination attempt: Authorities give security update for 1st rally in aftermath

Authorities in a suburban New York county that will host President Donald Trump’s first campaign rally since the second failed assassination attempt are delivering a security briefing as they prepare for the 2024 Republican candidate’s arrival.

Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman and Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder sought to reassure voters of their security measures at a news briefing ahead of the event.

Trump will rally supporters at the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum Wednesday evening – just days after the U.S. Secret Service opened fire on an armed man who pointed a rifle at him from the perimeter of his golf course in West Palm Beach, Florida.

The suspect in that case, Ryan Wesley Routh
, made his first appearance in federal court earlier Monday. He is facing federal charges of felony possession of a firearm and possessing a gun with its serial number defaced.

More charges could be likely as the investigation continues.

On July 13, another gunman opened fire at the Trump rally in Butler County, Pennsylvania.

Thomas Matthew Crooks, 20, killed a 50-year-old father of two named Corey Comperatore, critically wounded David Dutch, 57, and James Copenhaver, 74, according to authorities.

Trump invites officers who nabbed suspect to Mar-a-Lago: sheriff

Martin County Sheriff Will Snyder provided new details on Monday about the second assassination attempt on former President Trump, including that Trump invited the officers who caught the suspect to his Mar-a-Lago estate. 

Snyder deputies received a description of suspect Ryan Routh’s
vehicle and vehicle tags from Palm Beach County authorities, which allowed the deputies to quickly locate Routh on northbound Interstate 95. 

“Thank God we found that car,” Snyder said. “I think we were able to give former President Trump peace of mind.” 

“He’s invited the men and women involved in the stop to go to Mar-a-Lago and be thanked for what they did,” the sheriff continued. 

When a reporter asked to clarify whether Trump extended that invitation to the law enforcement involved in Routh’s arrest, Snyder replied: “He did.” 

Snyder said that Routh was caught near the Palm City exit in I-95, and it took about 2 miles to get all the resources in play for authorities to surround the vehicle and force it to a stop. 

“He was smart, he was just driving with the flow of traffic. I think that he may have thought that he got away with it.”

Bodycam video captures arrest of Trump assassination attempt suspect

The moment that deputies arrested a suspect in an attempted assassination of former President Trump in Florida was captured on officer-worn bodycam video that was released Monday afternoon.

Ryan Routh, 58, was captured Sunday on northbound Interstate 95 after deputies surrounded his vehicle, Martin County Sheriff Will Snyder said during a press briefing Monday.

The sheriff’s office released the footage, which shows deputies ordering the driver to slowly walk backwards with his hands on his head toward deputies after surrendering.

Routh is accused of lying in wait for Trump in the brush at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, while armed with an SKS-style rifle.

This is an excerpt from an article by Fox News’ Stephen Sorace.

Trump assassination attempt suspect lurked near golf course for nearly 12 hours: phone records

Suspect Ryan Wesley Routh camped out on Trump International Golf Course West Palm Beach for nearly 12 hours in his alleged attempt to assassinate former President Trump, phone records show.

The charging document released by federal authorities for Routh details much of the police action taken after he fled the scene. A witness saw Routh run out of a tree line and into a black Nissan. Local police would later use that description to stop Routh in traffic. The witness was then transported to the traffic stop location to confirm Routh’s identity.

“Agents requested T-Mobile, on an emergency basis, to provide law enforcement with information pertaining to Routh’s mobile phone usage. Those records indicated that Routh’s mobile phone was located in the vicinity of the area along the tree line from approximately 1:59 AM until approximately 1:31 PM on September 15,” the charging document reads.

The Secret Service patrols at least one hole ahead of the former President whenever he is playing golf. One such agent spotted Routh’s rifle poking out of the tree line and immediately opened fire. Routh is not believed to have fired a shot.

Who is acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe?

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe is on the ground in West Palm Beach, Florida, following the second assassination attempt against former President Trump on Monday.

Rowe took over the agency
following the resignation of ex-Director Kimberly Cheatle, who was harshly criticized for her handling of the first assassination attempt against Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania.

Rowe, as acting director, has leaped into the forefront of the House Oversight Committee’s investigation of the agency’s failures that nearly allowed 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks to kill Trump during a Pennsylvania rally on Saturday, July 13.

Rowe is now responsible for leading the more than 7,800 special agents, uniformed division officers and technical law enforcement officers, as well as administrative and technical staff.

Rowe, a 24-year veteran of the Secret Service, has served in a multitude of leadership positions within the agency. Rowe was also assigned to the Presidential Protective Detail during the Bush administration from 2004 to 2008.

Prior to joining the Secret Service, Rowe served as a police officer in West Palm Beach, where Sunday’s incident occurred.

Second assassination attempt suspect had at least 100 run-ins with law enforcement

Ryan Routh, the man accused of attempting to assassinate former President Trump on Sunday, has had at least 100 run-ins with law enforcement before his most recent arrest. 

A background check on Routh revealed that he currently lives in Hawaii and has faced dozens of run-ins with police, stretching back to at least the 1990s. 

His list of arrests includes simple drug possession, driving without a license, expired inspection and operating a vehicle with no insurance. In addition, the Greensboro News & Record reported in 2002 that Routh was arrested after barricading himself in his roofing company’s office during a three-hour standoff that followed a traffic stop in which he put his hand on a gun before fleeing. 

Routh was arrested shortly after the incident at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Fla. Authorities said Secret Service agents fired at him after seeing the muzzle of his AK-47 pointing through a chain-link fence one hole ahead of where Trump was playing a round.

Flashback: Kai Trump addresses grandfather Donald Trump’s first assassination attempt at RNC

Kai Trump, the eldest grandchild of former President Trump and daughter of Donald Trump Jr., addressed what would be the first assassination attempt on her grandfather during the Republican National Convention in July. 

Kai, 17, said at the time that she was “shocked” and found the incident that unfolded on the stage of a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, to be “heartbreaking.” 

“On Saturday, I was shocked when I heard that he had been shot, and I just wanted to know if he was OK,” she said during the speech, recounting that it took roughly 90 minutes to find out her grandfather survived.

“It was heartbreaking that someone would do that to another person.” 

She also expressed pride in how her grandfather handled the moment. 

Kai said she had “never seen anything like” the iconic scene of Trump getting up and pumping his fist in the aftermath of the shot that grazed his ear. 

“I thought it was amazing and so strong, and you can’t fake that in the moment at all,” she said of the scene. “That means he truly cares, and he’s fighting for America.” 

Trump was the target of a second assassination attempt on Sunday while golfing at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida.

Florida Gov. DeSantis says state will conduct investigation into second Trump assassination attempt

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said Sunday that his state will conduct a separate investigation into how a second gunman was able to get within 500 yards of former President Trump.

The former president was playing a round at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, when the U.S. Secret Service opened fire on Ryan Wesley Routh, who was allegedly armed with a rifle.

Authorities said Routh had a GoPro camera and two backpacks, and allegedly shoved the muzzle of his rifle through a chain-linked fence about 300 to 500 yards away from the former president.

The agents fired at Routh
after they saw him raising the weapon, Fox News’ Lucas Tomlinson confirmed. Routh then fled in a black Nissan but was apprehended quickly, authorities said.

This is an excerpt from an article by Fox News’ Greg Wehner

Trump assassination suspect Routh seen laughing as he is charged with federal gun crimes

Ryan Wesley Routh, the suspect in the second assassination attempt against former President Trump, was seen laughing in the courtroom
as he was charged with federal gun crimes Monday.

He was charged with possession of firearm by convicted felon and possession of firearm with obliterated serial number. FOX has been told additional federal charges are possible.

Routh will be arraigned on Sept. 30.

Routh has been in custody since Sunday afternoon, when he attempted to lie in ambush at Trump International Golf Course in West Palm Beach, Florida. A Secret Service agent saw Routh’s AK-47-style rifle poking through a fence and agents opened fire.

Routh was not hit, and he fled without returning fire. A witness saw him enter a black Nissan and photographed the vehicle for police. Routh was soon apprehended in a nearby county.

The suspect was being held at the Palm Beach County jail, which lies just across the street from Trump International Golf Course. It is unclear where Routh will be taken following Monday’s court proceedings.

Fox News’ Heather Lacy and Shona Holagh contributed to this report

Biden says Secret Service ‘needs more help’ after second Trump assassination attempt

President Biden briefly responded to questions from reporters outside the White House about the second assassination attempt of former President Trump

Biden greeted reporters on the South Lawn of the White House as he was leaving for Marine One. 

“Thank god the president is okay,” Biden said of Trump when reporters asked for more information about the assassination attempt.

“The one thing I want to make more clear is service needs more help and I think Congress should respond to their needs,” Biden continued. 

One reporter can be heard asking: “What kind of help do they need?” 

“I think they may need – they’re deciding whether they need more personnel or not,” Biden responded before continuing toward Marine One. 

Trump was golfing Sunday at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida, when Secret Service agents thwarted the assassination attempt, firing on a suspect who authorities say was poking a rifle through the fence just one hole, about 300 yards, ahead of the former president. 

The suspect, identified as 58-year-old Ryan Wesley Routh
of North Carolina, was arrested a short time later after a witness shared a photo of the suspect’s vehicle with authorities. 

Routh will appear in federal court in West Palm on Monday morning, where he is expected to face federal charges.

Trump blames Biden-Harris ‘rhetoric’ for 2nd assassination attempt, says he will ‘save the country’

EXCLUSIVE:
 Former President Trump said President Biden and Vice President Harris’ “rhetoric” is what is causing him to be “shot at,” following the second assassination attempt against him since July, while telling Fox News Digital that the suspected gunman “acted” on “highly inflammatory language” of Democrats.  

Trump spoke exclusively with Fox News Digital Monday morning, just a day after he was rushed off of the golf course at Trump International in West Palm Beach, Fla., after the Secret Service discovered a gunman in the bushes. 

The suspected gunman, Ryan Wesley Routh, had an AK-47 style rifle pointing through the chain-link fence out toward the green; a go-pro camera; and two backpacks. He ran from the scene but was pulled over and arrested on I-95. 

Authorities are treating the episode as an apparent assassination attempt against Trump.

Trump was safe following the second assassination attempt against him since July. 

“He believed the rhetoric of Biden and Harris, and he acted on it,” Trump said of the gunman in an interview with Fox News Digital. “Their rhetoric is causing me to be shot at, when I am the one who is going to save the country, and they are the ones that are destroying the country — both from the inside and out.” 

Trump pointed to Biden and Harris’ past comments casting Trump as a “threat to democracy,” while telling Americans they are “unity” leaders. 

“They are the opposite,” Trump said. “These are people that want to destroy our country.” 

He added: “It is called the enemy from within. They are the real threat.” 

This is an excerpt from an article by Fox News’ Brooke Singman

Assassination suspect urged Iran to kill Trump in book

The suspect in the second assassination attempt of former President Trump urged Iran to kill him in an apparently self-published book. 

“You are free to assassinate Trump,” Routh wrote of Iran in the book, “Ukraine’s Unwinnable War,” The Associated Press reported. 

The book, published in 2023, described the former president as a “fool” and “buffoon” for both the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riots and the “tremendous blunder” of leaving the Iran nuclear deal. 

Routh described himself online as an initial supporter of Trump before developing a disdain for the former president. 

Routh was arrested Sunday after the Secret Service thwarted the assassination attempt. Authorities said that Routh stalked Trump as he golfed in West Palm Beach, Florida, with a AK-47-style rifle.

Trump assassination attempt task force demands answers as political rhetoric hits ‘fever pitch’

Reps. Mike Kelly, R-Pa., and Jason Crow, D-Co., joined ‘America’s Newsroom’ to discuss the second attempt on former President Donald Trump’s life and lingering questions on the incident as the investigation continues Monday.

Crow opened by condemning the assassination attempt, saying political violence “has no place” in our country. Kelley added that the Secret Service has told the House task force investigating Trump’s first assassination attempt that the agency is short on staff.

“We’ve reached a point right now where the rhetoric has hit a fever pitch,” Kelley said. “First of all, the event in Butler was a public event. We had 25-30 thousand people. And when Trump is playing golf at Trump International – how did the shooter know he was coming? In Butler, everyone knew he was coming. There were preparations that should have been put in place.”

Crow added that the House will be investigating whether Secret Service protocols
were followed in the Florida incident. He said it the agency appeared not to follow protocols in the Butler, Pennsylvania, assassination attempt.

Palm Beach Sheriff Ric Bradshaw delivers update on Trump’s golf course assassination attempt

Palm Beach County, Florida, Sheriff Ric Bradshaw joined Fox News to explain the investigation into the second assassination attempt against former President Trump on Monday.

Bradshaw said authorities are looking into whether the suspect, Ryan Wesley Routh, had a place where he was staying locally in Florida. Routh’s main residence has been in Hawaii in recent years.

Bradshaw confirmed that Routh is being held in the Palm Beach county jail ahead of his court appearance later Monday.

“Right now, its about gathering some more forensics if we can and see where the gun came from,” Bradshaw said.

He went on to say that Routh has not spoken to police, though he could not comment on whether Routh had already obtained legal representation.

Bradshaw credited the Secret Service agents for opening fire on Routh before he could attack the former president. He said the Secret Service patrols at least one hole ahead of Trump when he plays golf.

Trump attempted assassination suspect Ryan Routh to appear in federal court

Ryan Routh, the man accused of trying to assassinate former President Trump on Sunday, will appear in federal court in West Palm on Monday morning.

Routh is expected to face federal charges, though it is unclear whether he will face state charges.

Routh, a 58-year-old native of North Carolina, was being held at Palm Beach County Jail after authorities captured him Sunday.

As Trump was golfing at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Fla., Secret Service agents fired shots after spotting someone poking a rifle through the fence at the golf course just one hole away from the former president.

The suspect fled, but was authorities quickly captured the suspect, identified as Routh, after a witness shared a photo of his vehicle.

Fox News’ David Spunt contributed to this report.

Dem rep demands Secret Service expand Trump protective perimeter: ‘Unacceptable’

A Democratic congressman demanded that the U.S. Secret Service expand the protective perimeter around former President Donald Trump following a second assassination attempt on Sunday. 

“Two assassination attempts in 60 days on a former President & the Republican nominee is unacceptable,” Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., wrote. “The Secret Service must come to Congress tomorrow, tell us what resources are needed to expand the protective perimeter, & lets allocate it in a bipartisan vote the same day.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said he was briefed by the acting director of the Secret Service and applauded the Secret Service “for their quick response to ensure former President Trump’s safety.”

“There is no place in this country for political violence of any kind,” Schumer wrote. “The perpetrator must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., appeared to reference the assassination attempt on Trump indirectly in a social media post. 

“Political violence has no place in a democratic society,” Jeffries wrote. 

Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, a Florida Democrat running against Republican Sen. Rick Scott for his seat in the upper chamber, also appeared to allude to the assassination attempt with a broader message.

“Gun violence, and political violence, have no place in our society. PERIOD,” she wrote on X. 

Rep. Laurel Lee says Biden, Harris should call for Trump to have presidential level security detail

Rep. Laurel Lee, R-Fla., said the level of resources assigned to former President Trump are a failure, and called on President Biden and Vice President Harris to ask that additional security be assigned to the former president after a second assassination attempt on Sunday

Lee, a member of the bipartisan House task force investigating the previous attempted assassination of Trump in Butler, Pa., in July, told “Fox & Friends” that the threat to Trump is “extreme” and requires a stronger level of security. 

“President Biden and Vice President Harris should call for a full presidential level detail to be assigned to President Trump,” Lee said. “Clearly the threat to him is extreme and that needs to happen immediately.” 

Lee said that spending priorities need to be investigated so that any security “failures” can be addressed. 

“As Congress, we have an obligation to look at the entire Department of Homeland Security, see where there spending priorities are, see where that money is going,” Lee said. “Absolutely there are places we could be cutting the spending at Homeland Security and those resources may need to go to Secret Service to make sure they have a full complement of agents who are the best and the brightest.” 

Secret Service agents thwarted
the apparent attempt on Trump’s life while the former president was golfing at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Fla., on Sunday. Agents fired on a suspect who was poking a rifle through the fence just one hole ahead of the former president. 

The suspect was eventually apprehended through the help of a witness who shared a photo of the suspect’s getaway vehicle.

Prosecutor Dave Aronberg: What charges can Ryan Wesley Routh face?

West Palm Beach State Attorney Dave Aronberg detailed the potential charges that suspect Ryan Wesley Routh could face following the second assassination attempt against former President Trump.

Aronberg appeared on Fox News Monday morning and said Routh will be prosecuted under federal rather than state law, and he will appear in court either Monday or Tuesday. Aronberg said his office had been working on warrants for pre-trial detention before federal authorities took over the case.

Aronberg added that he expects Routh to be charged with aggravated assault with a firearm against a federal law enforcement officer, which carries a sentence of up to 20 years in prison.

“He’s also apparently an ex-felon in possession of a firearm. That can get you up to 10 years in prison. That’s the easiest charge to prove of all,” Aronberg said. “He’s also perhaps being investigated for a threat against a former president, which can get you up to five years in prison.”

Aronberg noted that Routh was carrying a GoPro camera at the time of the incident. He said depending on the contents of the camera, it could be used as evidence against Routh.

Hannity says Secret Service ‘pounced’ on Trump ‘within seconds’ after gunshots

Fox News Channel’s Sean Hannity spoke with former President Trump on Sunday moments after an apparent assassination attempt in Florida and gave grim details on what may have been the second attempt on Trump’s life in just two months.

Hannity joined fellow hosts Eric Shawn and Arthel Neville as the news was breaking, telling viewers he had just spoken with Trump and Miami real estate developer Steven Witkoff, who were on the fifth hole at about 1:30 p.m. when shots rang out at the Trump International Golf Club West Palm Beach.

“Within seconds, the Secret Service pounced on the president and covered him,” Hannity said. “You had snipers with tripods. They knew the direction where the shots had been fired. And they had eyes on the location where the shots had been fired,” Hannity said, adding that Secret Service whisked the president away to the clubhouse.

It was later determined that the shots had been fired by Secret Service agents who saw the suspect with an AK-47, which he discarded as he fled in a black Nissan. The man, who was not identified, was arrested a short time later.

Sunday’s shooting comes approximately two months after an assassination attempt on Trump just minutes after he began a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

Hannity said Trump’s main concern upon reaching the clubhouse seemed to be to make sure everyone was OK. The former president quipped that he regretted not being able to finish the hole he was on. 

This is an excerpt from an article by Fox News’ Bradford Betz

House Speaker Mike Johnson says Trump in ‘good spirits’ after second assassination attempt

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., joined “Fox & Friends” on Monday morning to share details about his meeting with former President Trump at Mar-a-Lago shortly after Secret Service agents thwarted a second assassination attempt on the former president. 

“He was in very good spirits,” Johnson said of Trump, “as you might expect, that’s who he is, so resilient.” 

“There has been no leader in the history of America who has been so attacked and has remained so strong and so resilient,” Johnson said. “He is one-of-a-kind. He is not going to stop fighting for the American people.” 

Trump was golfing at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Fla., when Secret Service agents fired on a suspect who was poking a rifle through the fence just one hole ahead of the former president. The suspect was eventually apprehended through the help of a witness who shared a photo of the suspect’s getaway vehicle. The incident comes two months after Trump survived a previous assassination attempt during a rally in Butler, Penn. 

Johnson said that Trump surviving two assassination attempts was not luck, but rather providence. 

“God has spared his life twice now,” Johnson said, adding that he thinks the second assassination attempt has moved Trump’s heart as the former president continues to process the incident. 

Johnson also said he believes Trump needs more security following the attempts, noting that a lack of manpower, not funding, is likely holding back additional security coverage.

Trump assassination task force member: ‘No way in hell’ Palm Beach suspect should have been so close

Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., blasted the Secret Service and other authorities for not securing the area around former President Trump before another 
attempted assassination attempt
 against him on Sunday.

Burchett spoke to Eric Shawn on “Fox News Live” about ongoing details regarding the assassination attempt outside Trump International Golf Club where Trump was playing golf at the time. Authorities have said the suspect, later identified as Ryan Wesley Routh, was 300 to 500 yards before Secret Service opened fire against him.

The congressman wants answers on how the suspect was able to get that close to the former president and revealed that other lawmakers are already demanding more security measures.

“They are already calling now. And you got to ask yourself, why was there not a drone flying over wherever the president is? This is ridiculous,” Burchett said.

While he had harsh criticism for the Secret Service, the Tennessee lawmaker complimented the agents who were able to spot and open fire on the suspect.

“The problem is you’ve got a Secret Service
, at least in my opinion, and in the public’s eye, that is compromised and that it lacks in leadership. And you’ve got great agents on the ground, obviously, one who took that shot. But why in the world would anybody be anywhere near the perimeter of this? This line of sight that we talk about is just beyond me. So we’ve got to get some answers. I don’t think we’re going to get them during this administration, but hopefully, under the Trump administration, we’ll clean this rat’s nest out,” Burchett said.

He added, “There is no way in hell that somebody should have been that close to President Trump with an AK Steel or AK-47 or whatever it was with a scope.”

This is an excerpt from an article by Fox News’ Lindsay Kornick

Who is Ryan Wesley Routh: Alleged gunman at Trump golf club

The 58-year-old man accused of pointing an AK-47 at former President Donald Trump on Sunday afternoon has a prolific arrest record that spans several decades.

Ryan Wesley Routh was arrested shortly after the incident at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Fla. Authorities said Secret Service agents fired at him after seeing the muzzle of his AK-47 pointing through a chain-link fence one hole ahead of where Trump was playing.

Authorities are treating the episode as an apparent assassination attempt on Trump.

A background check on the name given by officials, Ryan Wesley Routh, revealed that he currently lives in Hawaii and has faced dozens of run-ins with police, stretching back to at least the 1990s.

Routh is a native of North Carolina, where his list of arrests includes simple drug possession, driving without a license, expired inspection and operating a vehicle with no insurance. In addition, the Greensboro News & Record reported in 2002 that Routh was arrested after barricading himself in his roofing company’s office during a three-hour standoff that followed a traffic stop in which he put his hand on a gun before fleeing.

Routh moved to Hawaii in 2017, records show. He has since launched another construction company in Hawaii that builds simple housing structures for homeless people, according to a LinkedIn page that appears to belong to Routh.

This is an excerpt from an article by Fox News’ Emma Colton

JD Vance responds to second assassination attempt on Trump’s life

Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, responded to the second attempted assassination on his running mate, former President Trump. 

Vance wrote in a post on social media that he was “glad” Trump was safe after the incident at the Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Fla., where the former president was playing a round on Sunday. 

“I spoke to [Trump] before the news was public and he was, amazingly, in good spirits,” Vance wrote. “Still much we don’t know, but I’ll be hugging my kids extra tight tonight and saying a prayer of gratitude.” 

Secret Service agents fired shots after spotting someone hiding in shrubbery and poking a rifle through the fence at the golf course just one hole away from the former president. 

The suspect, identified as 58-year-old
Ryan Wesley Routh
, a native of North Carolina, fled from the golf course, but was quickly captured by authorities after a witness shared a photo of his vehicle.

Acting Secret Service director in West Palm Beach for site walk-through

Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe
is in West Palm Beach today meeting with local law enforcement and members of the Secret Service following a second assassination attempt against former President Trump.

Secret Service Chief Spokesman Anthony Guglielmi confirmed Rowe’s presence in a statement to Fox News on Sunday. Rowe will conduct a walkthrough of the site of the shooting later Monday.

Rowe joined the Secret Service in 1999, prior to which he served as a police officer in West Palm Beach.

Trump was declared safe shortly after Sunday’s incident, where suspected gunman Ryan Wesley Routh was found lying in wait in bushes just one hole away from the former president. Secret Service agents opened fire on him before he could act. He fled, but was soon apprehended thanks to a witness who photographed his escape vehicle, a black Nissan.

Fox News’ David Spunt contributed to this report

Witness saw Trump assassination suspect flee bushes, took photo of getaway car

Florida authorities say an unknown witness took a photo of the suspected Trump gunman’s car after he saw Ryan Welsey Routh flee out of bushes on Sunday.

Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw delivered a press conference alongside FBI and other law enforcement shortly after the incident Sunday.

“We were able to locate a witness who came to us and said, ‘Hey, I saw the guy running out of the bushes. He jumped into a black Nissan,” Bradshaw said. He added that the witness took a photo of the vehicle, including its “tag.”

The vehicle was later found on I-95 heading toward Martin County. The Martin County’s Sheriff’s Office then stopped the vehicle and detained Routh.

Police later discovered an AK-47 in the bushes near where Trump was playing golf. It had a scope, and two backpacks were discovered next to it, along with a GoPro.

Trump assassination attempt suspect’s son says dad hated Trump, ‘not a violent person’

The son of Ryan Wesley Routh, the suspected gunman in a second assassination attempt on former President Trump, says his father hated Trump but argued he was not a violent person.

Oran Routh told the Daily Mail that his father
disliked Trump “as every reasonable person does,” adding that he himself was not a fan. He reportedly expressed disbelief that his father could resort to violence and target the former president, however.

“He’s my dad and all he’s had is couple traffic tickets, as far as I know,” the son said. “That’s crazy. I know my dad and love my dad, but that’s nothing like him.”

“He said he was at the beach, but I thought that meant the outer banks in Hawaii,” he said. “I didn’t ask him for more information because we’ve had a falling out. We’ve grown apart.”

Routh has been living in Hawaii with his longtime girlfriend for multiple years, the Mail reported.

“He’s not a violent person,” Oran added. “He’s a hard worker and a great dad. He’s a great dude, a nice guy and has worked his whole f**king life.”

Authorities said Routh allegedly shoved the muzzle of his rifle through a chain-linked fence about 300 to 500 yards away from Trump while the former president was playing golf.

Routh fled the scene and was quickly apprehended.

Trump was rushed to safety shortly after Secret Service agents fired on Rout. The gunman was lying in wait just one hole away from the former president when he was discovered.

Biden condemns ‘political violence’ after 2nd Trump assassination attempt

President Biden on Sunday condemned “political violence” following the second assassination attempt on former President Trump earlier in the day.

The Democratic president said he had been briefed on the incident and the federal investigation into the matter.

“A suspect is in custody, and I commend the work of the Secret Service and their law enforcement partners for their vigilance and their efforts to keep the former President and those around him safe,” Biden said in a statement, adding that he was “relieved” the Republican presidential candidate was “unharmed.”

“There is an active investigation into this incident as law enforcement gathers more details about what happened,” Biden said. “As I have said many times, there is no place for political violence or for any violence ever in our country, and I have directed my team to continue to ensure that Secret Service has every resource, capability and protective measure necessary to ensure the former President’s continued safety.”