Investigation Suggests Trump’s Would-Be Assassin May Have Had Accomplices
Private investigator claims a criminal network may have coordinated the 2024 assassination attempt, as questions remain about FBI transparency.
- Private investigator Doug Hagmann alleges that Thomas Matthew Crooks, who attempted to assassinate Donald Trump in July 2024, did not act alone and may have been part of a larger criminal network.
- Hagmann's team conducted geofencing analysis and found unexplained device activity linked to Crooks, including a device still pinging at Bethel Park High School, raising further questions.
- The FBI has been accused by Hagmann and others of obstructing investigations, with federal agents reportedly hindering Hagmann's efforts to gather evidence in Butler County, Pennsylvania.
- Rep. Clay Higgins, who chaired a bipartisan task force on the incident, believes Crooks acted alone but suspects pharmaceuticals may have influenced his behavior, though no toxicology tests were included in the autopsy report.
- Crooks, a 20-year-old engineering student with a strong academic record, left no manifesto or clear motive, leaving friends, teachers, and investigators baffled about what drove his actions.