Local Police Chief Gives Congress Details Secret Service Wouldn’t

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Police Commissioner Christopher Paris was a whole lot more helpful to Congress than Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle.
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Police Commissioner Christopher Paris was a whole lot more helpful to Congress than Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle. She spent six hours on the witness stand and didn’t even have a clue how many shots had been fired. There were eight. She had no choice and resigned in disgrace. The day after she added fuel to the conspiracy theories, Paris took the stand and provided crucial details.

Police provide the facts

Christopher Paris serves as Pennsylvania State Police Commissioner. He took the congressional witness stand, in front of the House Oversight Committee, on Tuesday, to fill in gaps that the Secret Service are keeping secret.

Juicy little details like the fact “two snipers left a vantage point that overlooked the gunman minutes before he attempted to assassinate Donald Trump.” They possibly could have eliminated the threat if they had stayed in position.

Even on the day of the shooting, July 13, police officers of various local agencies on the ground in Butler, Pennsylvania, were convinced that the feds were going to cover things up. Several of them reached out to a local reporter they had worked with in the past to provide him with plenty of “exclusive” information.

Commissioner Paris shared some of those same details with lawmakers. The former director of the Secret Service is out of a job because she wouldn’t.

The police commissioner was happy to provide Congress with a “preliminary timeline of events.” He told them details of the communications cops had with Secret Service agents. “From when they initially spotted Crooks in a crowd to the moment he opened fire on Trump.

They watched him closely for about an hour leading up to the shooting. Except, for a few minutes when they lost him. That was the excuse for drawing local snipers away. Nobody bothered to alert Trump about any of that.

The former director of the Secret Service is out of a job.

Butler County snipers

The Butler County Emergency Services Unit had a sniper unit of their own, on site and in position. They had a perfect vantage covering the rooftop the sniper would eventually use. A few moments before he climbed up into position, the police snipers were drawn away from their posts.

They had orders to go help look for the suspect on the ground, who had slipped his surveillance. If they had been in position, they most likely would have taken Thomas Crooks out before he fired a single shot.

Another thing that Paris confirmed is that the shooter was confronted by police “minutes” before the “first shots rang.” That’s when a local cop peeked over the roof. Crooks pointed his rifle in his face and the cop dropped. A radio alert went out a good two to three minutes before he opened fire.

There was plenty of time to get Donald Trump to safety before he was shot. It appears that he was intentionally left standing right on a bullseye by his Secret Service body guards. If they weren’t aware of the threat then they weren’t doing their job. As more of the puzzle pieces fit together, the big picture looks more like an inside job all the time.

Another inconsistency swirls around the “phone number” Secret Service instructed state police to use when they wanted to transmit “an alert and photo of Crooks.” For some reason it appears the feds wanted to keep that off the main system.

Committee Chair Mark Green noted that he was “totally blown away” that “federal agents didn’t pull the event after receiving the warning.” North Carolina Representative Dan Bishop agrees, calling it a “colossal failure” by the Secret Service.

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Mark Megahan

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