Body of Trump's would-be assassin is 'gone,' congressman reveals FBI's 'unheard of' act in investigation 'obstruction'



A congressman released a preliminary investigative report on the assassination attempt against former President Donald Trump this week, in which he declared the body of the would-be assassin is "gone." The congressman also revealed an "unheard of" act committed by the FBI that he deemed an "obstruction to any following investigative effort."

Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.) — a member of the House Bipartisan Task Force on the Attempted Assassination of Donald J. Trump — released his preliminary investigative report, in which he noted some of the eye-opening revelations that he had uncovered during his "boots on the ground" fact-finding trip to Butler, Pennsylvania, August 4-6.

'The FBI cleaned up biological evidence from the crime scene, which is unheard of. Cops don’t do that, ever.'

Higgins confirmed that the shooter — Thomas Matthew Crooks — fired eight shots from the rooftop of the American Glass Research building during the Trump rally on July 13. Crooks was approximately 150 yards from the stage where Trump was delivering his campaign speech.

Higgins noted that the location of the shooter "provided excellent concealment" from the northern counter-sniper team due to trees. However, the congressman noted that Crooks' location "did NOT offer excellent concealment from the southern counter-sniper team." Higgins added that the "would-be assassin perfectly positioned himself to minimize the threat of counter-fire" from the ground or the Secret Service counter-sniper teams.

After Crooks fired eight shots toward the former president, a "badass" Butler SWAT operator returned fire from the ground about 100 yards away from the AGR building. The SWAT operator hit Crooks’ "rifle stock and fragged his face/neck/right shoulder area from the stock breaking up."

The reported final shot that killed Crooks was fired by the U.S. Secret Service southern counter-sniper team. The purported kill shot entered the left side of the shooter's mouth area and exited the right ear area.

Higgins claimed that the FBI scrubbed the crime scene of biological evidence before he could investigate the area.

"The FBI cleaned up biological evidence from the crime scene, which is unheard of. Cops don’t do that, ever," Higgins wrote in his report.

Higgins said he encountered another obstacle in his investigation into the Trump assassination attempt when he discovered the body of the shooter was "gone."

"My effort to examine Crooks’ body on Monday, August 5, caused quite a stir and revealed a disturbing fact. … The FBI released the body for cremation 10 days after J13," the congressman stated.

By July 23, "Crooks was gone," he said.

"Nobody knew this until Monday, August 5, including the County Coroner, law enforcement, Sheriff, etc.," Higgins continued. "Yes, Butler County Coroner technically had legal authority over the body, but I spoke with the coroner, and he would have never released Crooks’ body to the family for cremation or burial without specific permission from the FBI."

"Again, similar to releasing the crime scene and scrubbing crime scene biological evidence ... this action by the FBI can only be described by any reasonable man as an obstruction to any following investigative effort," Higgins declared.

Higgins noted, "The problem with me not being able to examine the actual body is that I won’t know 100% if the coroner’s report and the autopsy report are accurate. We will actually never know. Yes, we’ll get the reports and pictures, etc, but I will not ever be able to say with certainty that those reports and pictures are accurate according to my own examination of the body."

The Republican lawmaker also said that the coroner’s report and autopsy report were both a "week late" as of Aug. 5.

A spokesperson with the FBI told WTAE-TV that the agency was "surprised" and "disturbed" regarding the allegations of investigation obstruction. The agency also said it was unaware that Congress wanted to hold the body for its own investigation.

The spokesperson said the cleanup of biological evidence from the crime scene and the release of the shooter's body were all conducted according to FBI procedures. The spokesperson said the gunman's body was released to the family after a "detailed, coordinated effort with the coroner's office."

Higgins also questioned why the Secret Service did not retrieve radios that had been set aside for them by Butler County tactical command.

"The radio comms were properly and perfectly arranged during the extensive pre-mission planning," Higgins stated. "On J12, the Butler County ESU Commander personally reminded the USSS counter-sniper teams to pick up their assigned radios at the ESU Command Post RV, which was positioned according to planning at the Butler Fairgrounds, the following morning before 1100 hrs. It didn’t happen."

Anthony Guglielmi — chief of communications for the U.S. Secret Service — said to WTAE-TV about the accusations made by the congressman:

Inter-agency communications on July 13 will be examined during the U.S. Secret Service’s ongoing mission assurance review. The U.S. Secret Service is committed to investigating the decisions and actions of personnel related to the event in Butler, Pennsylvania, and the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump. The U.S. Secret Service’s mission assurance review is progressing, and we are examining the processes, procedures, and factors that led to this operational failure. Any identified and substantiated violations of policy committed by our personnel will be investigated by the Office of Professional Responsibility for disciplinary action. The U.S. Secret Service is committed to holding our personnel accountable to the highest professional standards.

Higgins commended the Butler County tactical team’s commander and the head investigator for the Butler County DA’s office.

"Those gentlemen had nothing to hide, and they were 100% accommodating despite my rather intense demands on their time and resources due to the compressed schedule I was working with," Higgins said.

Higgins added that local law enforcement's performance during the assassination attempt was "very professionally deployed and commanded."

Higgins said he would release a "much more comprehensive" report on the assassination attempt in a few weeks.

"As I have said, every question will be answered, every theory explored, and every doubt erased. The American people deserve the full truth on the attempted assassination of President Trump," Higgins proclaimed. "Our investigative efforts are moving forward in good faith. The release of my preliminary investigative report is reflective of my desire to deliver transparency and reassurance to the American people."

The House task force investigating the assassination attempt against former President Trump will issue a final report before Dec. 13.

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Would-be Trump assassin's rampage ended when SWAT hit his rifle with a bullet, report says



Would-be assassin Thomas Matthew Crooks' wild rifle assault on former President Donald J. Trump and a Pennsylvania rally crowd July 13 was ended by a “total badass” SWAT operator who hit Crooks' rifle with a bullet from ground level 100 yards away, U.S. Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.) said.

Crooks, 20, was “fragged” in the face when a Butler County Emergency Services Unit SWAT operator fired at him from ground level and blew apart his rifle's stock, Higgins said Aug. 15.

In a report to the bipartisan House task force investigating the attempted assassination of former President Trump, Higgins credited the SWAT operator with ending Crooks' attack after eight shots — about 10 seconds before a police counter-sniper shot and killed Crooks. A source earlier told Blaze News the counter-sniper shot was fired from 448 yards southwest of Crooks' position.

“Shot 9 hit Crooks’ rifle stock and fragged his face/neck/right shoulder area from the stock breaking up,” Higgins wrote. “The SWAT operator who took this shot was a total badass. When he had sighted the shooter Crooks as a mostly obscured-by-foliage moving target on the [American Glass Research] rooftop, he immediately left his assigned post and ran towards the threat, running to a clear-shot position directly into the line of fire while Crooks was firing 8 rounds.”

Higgins said his preliminary report was based on about 20 hours of investigative work at the scene in Butler County Aug. 4-6.

“As always, my investigation was focused on hard evidence and facts, specific observations guided by instinct and experience,” he wrote. “My overall mission was to personally observe and investigate the available crime scene site, along with consideration of both anticipated and unanticipated interactions with witnesses, the crime scene landscape, hard evidence, corroborative evidence, and circumstantial evidence.”

Even after being identified by local police 90 minutes before the shooting as a suspicious person, Crooks was able to slip onto the roof of the sprawling AGR complex between 6:06 and 6:08 p.m. and run at least two-thirds the length of the roof to a concealed shooting perch on Building 6, bodycam footage showed.

A Pennsylvania State Police trooper broadcast a warning at 6:08 p.m. that someone was on the roof, but the Secret Service apparently did not hear it. The Secret Service had no personnel in the local police command center and failed to use the special radios provided by police for communicating with the local command center, officials have said.

Crooks shot Trump in the right ear at 6:11:32 p.m. during an initial burst of three rifle shots, followed by a rapid discharge of five more bullets. Killed in the gunfire was volunteer firefighter Corey Comperatore, 50, of Sarver, Pa. The seriously wounded included David Dutch, 57, of New Kensington, Pa., and James Copenhaver, 74, of Moon Township, Pa.

In a briefing last week with U.S. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), local police officials said the U.S. Secret Service has not even acknowledged the heroic action taken by the Butler County SWAT officer in stopping the attack. “That's not being widely reported,” Johnson said Aug. 11.

'This pattern of investigative scorched earth by the FBI is quite troubling.'

Higgins said it is possible that the bullet from the SWAT operator disabled Crooks’ weapon and prevented him from firing a ninth or subsequent time.

“On his own, this ESU SWAT operator took a very hard shot, one shot,” Higgins said. “He stopped Crooks, and importantly, I believe he damaged the buffer tube on Crooks’ AR. … This means that if his AR buffer tube was damaged, Crooks’ rifle would not fire after his eighth shot.”

The buffer tube on an AR-15-style rifle houses a system to control recoil when the weapon is fired.

When the SWAT bullet hit his AR-15, Crooks initially went down from his prone shooting stance, the report said, perhaps stunned by the debris striking his face and neck. After a few seconds, the Butler SWAT operator reported, Crooks “popped back up.”

Video shot from the west side of Building 6 by eyewitness Jon Malis shows Crooks almost sitting up after his rifle was hit. “Then when I looked back later with my video zoomed in,” Malis said. “Sure enough, you could see him sit up and sling his weapon around and aim it right towards us right before the Secret Service shot him.”

Higgins served in a variety of law enforcement roles in Louisiana before first taking office in the House in 2017. Most recently he served as deputy marshal for the city of Lafayette and previously held law enforcement positions at city, town, and parish departments.

FBI releases shooter's body

Higgins said he had planned to examine Crooks’ body on an investigative trip to Butler Aug. 5 but discovered the FBI had released it to the family for cremation on July 23. “Nobody knew this until Monday, August 5,” Higgins said.

“The problem with me not being able to examine the actual body is that I won’t know 100% if the coroner’s report and the autopsy report are accurate. We will actually never know,” Higgins wrote. “Yes, we’ll get the reports and pictures, etc., but I will not ever be able to say with certainty that those reports and pictures are accurate according to my own examination of the body.”

He said the FBI released the crime scene after just three days, harming the efforts of other investigations examining the shooting.

'Cops don't do that, ever.'

“I interviewed several first responders who expressed everything from surprise to dismay to suspicion regarding the fact that the FBI released the crime scene so early after J13,” he said. “It should be noted that the FBI was fully aware of the fact that Congress would be investigating J13. The FBI does not exist in a vacuum. They had to know that releasing the J13 crime scene would injure the immediate observations of any following investigation.”

The FBI also scrubbed the scene before releasing it.

A Beaver County Emergency Services SWAT operator and a medic enter the building from which Thomas Crooks shot former President Donald J. Trump at a rally July 13 in Butler, Pa.Butler Township Police Department via Judicial Watch

“The FBI cleaned up biological evidence from the crime scene, which is unheard of,” he said. “Cops don’t do that, ever.”

Higgins described the actions of the FBI as “obstruction” of congressional and other investigations that were started since the FBI opened its criminal probe of the shooting. The FBI was surely aware of the U.S. House task force appointed by Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), he said.

“Why, then, by what measure would the FBI release his body to the family for cremation? This pattern of investigative scorched earth by the FBI is quite troubling,” Higgins said.

Blaze News has contacted the FBI for comment on the Higgins report.

The Higgins report confirmed information published by Blaze News Aug. 12 that indicated Crooks took a path along the roof to his shooting perch that minimized his exposure to the counter-sniper teams. The view of the Secret Service counter-snipers was badly obscured by two large trees just southeast of the building from which Crooks fired. Crooks likely used his drone just before 4 p.m. to confirm the route he would take on the roof, a Blaze source said.

“Crooks’ firing position was also several feet back from the actual peak of the AGR rooftop,” Higgins said. “By choosing this position, Crooks effectively minimized the sky-lined profile of his head and upper body.”

No second shooter

The report discounted widely circulated internet theories that a second gunman was located atop the blue water tower at the edge of the AGR property. Higgins said the tower was checked and cleared using a drone in the morning. The retractable ladder to access the tower was never lowered that day, and local police squads sat underneath the tower much of the day, he said.

To reach the top of the tower, someone would have had to scale the first 25 feet with no ladder, then climb 75 feet to the catwalk, then make it up the “intimidating and precarious” dome vent access ladder.

“I do not believe it was possible for a '2nd shooter' sniper to be on top of that water tower on J13, nor have I seen any evidence that supports the theory of a 2nd shooter. I’m not saying conclusively that there was no other shooter somewhere or that no other conspirators were involved in J13, but I’m saying that based on my investigation thus far, there were 10 shots fired on J13, and all shots are accounted for, and all shots align with their source.”

Higgins also quashed the idea that a muzzle flash was seen in a first-floor window of the AGR building at the time of the shooting. He said he examined the window and determined it does not open.

Higgins gave high marks to the tactical teams and other local police officers who staffed the event and responded to the shooting. “My assessment of the local law enforcement's overall performance on J13 is that the ESU was very professionally deployed and commanded,” he said.

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'Easily 200 FBI undercover assets': Rep. Clay Higgins says FBI dressed as Trump supporters on January 6



Republican Rep. Clay Higgins (La.) made shocking claims that undercover assets working for the FBI operated on January 6, 2021, in the hundreds. Higgins also asserted that the assets were dressed as Trump supporters and helped those who entered the Capitol navigate the building.

The Louisiana Republican appeared on "The Tucker Carlson Encounter" and told the host that he estimated at least 200 undercover FBI assets both inside and outside the Capitol building.

"We believe that there were easily 200 FBI undercover assets operating in the crowd, outside the Capitol, embedded into groups that entered the Capitol or provoked entry of the Capitol," Higgins said. "Given the scope of the operation and the number of doors where entry was allowed or even encouraged — and the number of people that were actually outside the Capitol and that entered — we believe 200 [is a] conservative number," he continued.

Carlson responded with alarm, replying that it was "shocking" to hear and "confirms everyone's worst suspicions."

"It’s clearly true," the host tagged on.

Higgins further explained that based on the evidence he has seen, FBI assets worked with local D.C. Metro Police and the Capitol Police and dressed as supporters of President Trump while inside the Capitol.

"The FBI assets that were dressed as Trump supporters that were inside the Capitol were there, I believe, and evidence indicates that they were there to specifically wave in the Trump supporters that had gathered outside the Capitol."

"Those were the guys that knew their way around the Capitol," Higgins explained. "There’s no way they can come in some random door that gets opened and then get their way directly to Statuary [Hall] or the House chamber or the Senate chamber. It’s just not possible."

Those who made it inside the Capitol were then allegedly directed to "the areas where the FBI, the DOJ, and the Deep State actors" could charge and prosecute them.

FBI Director Christopher Wray had previously refused to answer questions from Higgins about FBI assets on January 6, 2021. He told Congress they "should not read anything into my decision not to share information on confidential human sources" when he refused to give details.

TRUTH #5: Attorney General Merrick Garland & FBI Director Christopher Wray have refused to say under questioning how many informants or undercover agents were embedded in the crowd on January 6.\n\n#EntrapmentDay
— (@)

Higgins said that the evidence "implicates [the] FBI at the highest level" and hoped that House Speaker Mike Johnson would release all documentation pertaining to the historic event.

"He has a responsibility to fully release that data, and then the American people will see for themselves what some of us have already learned, to our horror, to be true."

Ep. 61 This the smartest, best informed account of what actually happened on January 6th.
— (@)

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Facebook removes GOP lawmaker's post promising to ‘drop any 10' armed protesters who come to Louisiana and into his neighborhood



Facebook removed two posts from a Louisiana congressman's account in which the Republican lawmaker promised to "drop any 10" armed protesters "where [they] stand" should they come to Louisiana and into his neighborhood in a threatening manner.

The first post was removed for breaking the company's "Violence and Incitement" policies, a Facebook spokesperson reportedly told Baton Rouge news outlet, The Advocate, on Tuesday.

In that now-removed post, Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.) displayed a picture of protesters armed with long guns and wrote: "If this shows up, we'll consider the armed presence a real threat."

"We being, We, the People, of Louisiana," he added. "One way ticket fellas. Have your affairs in order."

Some outlets reporting on the news noted that Louisiana is an open-carry state, meaning a permit is not needed in order for someone to visibly carry a firearm in public.

Higgins, who formerly worked as a sheriff's deputy before entering politics, is known for his unwavering support for law enforcement and his vigorous anti-crime stance.

"Me? I wouldn't even spill my beer. I'd drop any 10 of you where you stand," he warned in the post. "We, are SWAT. Nothing personal. We just eliminate the threat. We don't care what color you are. We don't care if you're left or right. if you show up like this, if We recognize threat...you won't walk away."

BuzzFeed News reporter Salvador Hernandez was able to screenshot the post before it was taken down:

Rep. Clay Higgins has spoken at Oath Keepers events and appeared with other militia groups before. But when a rumor… https://t.co/CxP5ElQH7q
— Salvador Hernandez (@Salvador Hernandez)1599074530.0

"We don't want to see your worthless ass nor do we want to make your Mothers cry," Higgins added later in the post before implicitly threatening to meet the protesters with lethal force.

"You're the ones threatening, if you show yourselves, aggressively natured and armed in my presence. In my neighborhood. Where I work. Anywhere close enough to put my family or my fellow citizens in danger. That is where your journey will end. Fast," he wrote. "How fast? 1,450 FPS fast."

Protests over racial injustice and police brutality have frequently turned into violent and destructive riots in many communities across the country, including Portland, Oregon; Chicago, Illinois; and Kenosha, Wisconsin.

Higgins' Facebook post came as protests continued in Lafayette, Louisiana, over the death of Trayford Pellerin, a black man killed by police late last month.

In response to the first post's removal, Higgins took to Facebook with a second post, which was ultimately removed from the platform for "incitement" as well.

In that post, Higgins wrote: "No, I did not remove my post. America is being manipulated into a new era of government control. Your liberty is threatened from within. Welcome to the front lines, Ladies and Gentlemen. I suggest you get your mind right. I'll advise when it's time gear up, mount up, and roll out."

On Wednesday, Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.) characterized Higgins' posts as "dumb and reckless" and in need of "serious condemnation."