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Trump Vows to Unleash Shocking Details on Assassination Attempts

President Donald Trump is pushing for answers about the two assassination attempts against him, vowing to release a report that could expose shocking details. The president’s call for transparency comes as Americans demand accountability for the attacks that nearly took his life.

The first attempt happened in July 2024 at a Pennsylvania rally, where a bullet grazed Trump’s ear. The suspect, Thomas Matthew Crooks, was killed by Secret Service. Questions linger about Crooks’ motives, with reports of explosives found at his home and searches about mass shootings on his phone. The FBI still hasn’t explained how he got so close to Trump.

Two months later, another gunman targeted Trump while he golfed in Florida. Ryan Wesley Routh, a convicted felon with a history of anti-Trump rants, hid in bushes for 12 hours before being caught. Routh allegedly left a note admitting he tried to kill Trump and carried a rifle with a wiped serial number. His six cell phones and foreign app usage raised red flags about possible outside influences.

Trump slammed the slow pace of investigations, suggesting political bias delayed answers. “We can no longer blame Biden for this,” he said, hinting at deep-state resistance. The president praised Secret Service agents who stopped Routh but questioned why the suspect’s foreign ties weren’t flagged sooner.

Conservatives argue these attacks highlight the dangers of lax border policies and soft-on-crime leadership. Routh’s lengthy criminal record—including weapons charges—sparks outrage over why he wasn’t behind bars. His shift from Trump donor to radical critic mirrors the left’s escalating rhetoric against conservatives.

Skeptics doubt the full report will ever surface, comparing it to the buried Epstein client list or Hunter Biden’s laptop scandal. “They’ll redact it into oblivion,” one supporter tweeted. Others worry the deep state will protect foreign actors tied to the plots, leaving critical questions unanswered.

Trump remains defiant, pledging to declassify the findings despite resistance. “I want every bit of information out there,” he declared, framing the release as a matter of national security. Supporters cheer his transparency push, seeing it as a rebuke of Washington’s culture of secrecy.

As the 2025 trial dates near, Americans await answers. Trump’s promise to shine light on these attacks isn’t just about justice—it’s a rallying cry to protect leaders from the growing wave of political violence.

Written by Keith Jacobs

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