Suspends Agents On Trump’s Detail During PA Assassination Attempt
Six Secret Service agents were suspended without pay or benefits following an attempted assassination of President Donald Trump at a rally in Pennsylvania in July 2024.

Matt Quinn, the agency’s deputy director, told CBS News on Wednesday that they “weren’t going to fire [their] way out of this,” but did say they are “laser focused on fixing the root cause of the problem.”
Quinn told the outlet that the agents received penalties ranging from 10 to 42 days of unpaid leave and were assigned to restricted roles with reduced responsibilities upon their return. He added that the disciplinary measures followed a federally mandated process.
The agency faced intense criticism after the security breach that enabled gunman Thomas Crooks to open fire toward the stage at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13, 2024.
Corey Comperatore, a 50-year-old firefighter, father, and husband attending the event, was killed. President Trump was grazed by a bullet, and two other men were wounded by the gunfire. Crooks was ultimately killed by a Secret Service sniper.
“Secret Service is totally accountable for Butler,” Quinn told CBS. “Butler was an operational failure and we are focused today on ensuring that it never happens again.” He also said the agency is focusing on the “root cause” of the operational failure and fixing “the deficiencies that put us in that situation.”Since the Butler rally, Quinn stated that the Secret Service has deployed a new fleet of military-grade drones and mobile command posts to enhance radio communications with local law enforcement, Fox News reported.
The agency faced renewed criticism weeks later following a second assassination attempt on Trump in West Palm Beach, Florida. Although the attempt was thwarted, then-Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle resigned, and the agency became the focus of multiple investigations and congressional hearings.
In December, a bipartisan House task force released a 180-page report declaring the Butler incident “preventable,” pointing to “preexisting” leadership and training deficiencies that “created an environment” conducive to security failures.
The report also noted that Secret Service did not coordinate well with local law enforcement.
Trump made some comments last week regarding the government’s investigation into one of the assassination attempts against him last year.
In response to a reporter’s query on Friday, the president said he’s “very satisfied” with the FBI’s investigation into the assassination attempt against him in Pennsylvania.
Trump made his remarks to Daily Caller White House Correspondent Reagan Reese on Thursday, putting to rest months of speculation and doubt surrounding the case. Until now, Trump had stopped short of giving the FBI a full endorsement, The Daily Caller reported.
In an earlier interview with Fox News, he admitted some parts of the case didn’t sit right. “I’m relying on my people to tell me what it is … The Secret Service, they tell me, is fine. But it’s a little hard to believe,” he said.
Back in March, FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino told Fox News there was no evidence of some grand conspiracy against Trump. “In some of these cases, the ‘there’ you’re looking for is not there. And I know people — I get it, I understand. It’s not there. If it was there, we would have told you,” Bongino said.
That same month, Daily Caller’s Reese pressed White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt about whether Trump was satisfied with Bongino’s answer.
Leavitt responded, “Well, in the lead-up to your question, you answered your own question with the president’s own words, and I’ll leave it at that.”
In May, Bongino announced investigations into some well-known cases that involve “potential public corruption.”The cases, which appeared to be ignored during the administration of former President Joe Biden, that are getting a new look include the attempted pipe-bombing in Washington, D.C., cocaine that was found at the White House, and the leak of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision that ended Roe v. Wade.
AI Model Makes Stunning Prediction of 2028 Presidential Winner
An artificial intelligence model has generated a speculative forecast about the 2028 U.S. presidential election, despite official candidates not yet being known, drawing attention on social media and YouTube.

The forecast was produced using Grok, an AI chatbot developed by the company associated with Elon Musk, after a YouTube channel asked the system to simulate a likely outcome based on a set of hypothetical candidates. The simulation included state-by-state projections, an electoral map, and projected vote totals for chosen figures from both major parties.
As the host explains, “In this video, I asked Grok AI to predict the 2028 presidential election and give us a map forecast.”
In the end, Vance was predicted to take 312 electoral votes to Harris’ 212, according to the simulation; 270 are needed to win the presidency.
On the Democratic side, Kamala Harris currently holds the lead in early primary polling with 32 percent of the support, putting her ahead of California Governor Gavin Newsom, who has 23.8 percent. Former Biden Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg is in third place, just shy of 10 percent, while Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro follow close behind.
The host notes that Harris’s resurgence may surprise some, given that “many people did write Kamala Harris off following her 2024 election defeat.”
Recent polling indicates that she is regaining her advantage. Additionally, the betting markets reflect this positive trend, now suggesting there’s a 56 percent chance she will seek the Democratic nomination in 2028, a significant rise from just 11.2 percent a few months back.
“Today, it is more likely than not that she is going to run again,” the video states.
On the Republican side, Vice President JD Vance leads early polling with 49.2 percent support, significantly ahead of Donald Trump Jr., who is trailing by 29 points. Senator Marco Rubio has 12.5 percent, while Florida Governor Ron DeSantis stands at 9.2 percent.
According to the simulation, Vance is the clear favorite for the GOP nomination, with a 46 percent chance of becoming the party’s standard-bearer. Rubio follows with an 18 percent chance.
The host notes: “If nothing big changes, he will very likely become the party’s nominee in the next presidential race.”
Grok’s simulation begins by defining “solid” states as those with a margin of 15 points or more. Vance’s solid column includes the following states: Utah, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, most of Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia, Indiana, South Carolina, and Ohio.
The inclusion of Ohio marks a significant shift; once a key battleground, the state has trended sharply to the right, Newsner noted.
“It is not difficult to see that he will carry the Buckeye State by a solid 15-point margin,” particularly following Donald Trump’s double-digit win there in 2024, the host said in the video.
Harris’s group of solid states mirrors much of her 2024 coalition, showing some modest gains. She is projected to win the states of Washington, California, Hawaii, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, the District of Columbia, and Maine’s first congressional district by at least 15 points. Notably, the model predicts that Connecticut and Delaware will return to solid Democratic margins after experiencing narrower results in 2020.
After accounting for solid states, Vance leads with 139 electoral votes to 108. Additionally, the “likely” category, which contains margins between 5 and 15 points, further enhances his advantage.
He is projected to win in Iowa, North Carolina, Florida, Texas, Arizona, Alaska, and Maine’s second district. Florida and Texas are viewed as firmly Republican due to recent gains by the party, while Arizona, which was narrowly won by Trump in 2024, is expected to remain in Republican hands. With these solidly Republican and likely states counted, Vance would secure 246 electoral votes, leaving him just 24 votes short of the 270 needed to win.
I’ve Been An ER Doctor For 15 Years. When A Terrified 6-Year-Old Finally Opened His Mouth In My Trauma Bay.
"I’ve Been An ER Doctor For 15 Years. When A Terrified 6-Year-Old Finally Opened His Mouth In My Trauma Bay... What I Saw Hiding Inside Almost Made Me Black Out."
I’ve been a pediatric emergency room physician for over 15 years, but absolutely nothing could have prepared me for the sickening truth I found hiding inside a little boy's mouth on a rainy Tuesday night.
In my line of work, you think you’ve seen it all. You get used to the broken bones, the high fevers, the accidental swallowings of coins or Lego pieces.
You build a wall around your heart just to survive the shifts. But that wall crumbled to dust the second Tommy was wheeled through my doors.
It was 3:15 AM. The ER was mostly quiet, save for the rhythmic drumming of a heavy Seattle rainstorm against the reinforced glass windows.
I was on hour twelve of a fourteen-hour shift. My scrubs smelled like stale coffee and medical-grade bleach. I was sitting at the charting station, rubbing my tired eyes, just waiting for the clock to run out.
Then, the heavy red doors of the ambulance bay blew open.
The cold air rushed into the waiting area, followed instantly by the chaotic squeaking of gurney wheels.

"Trauma One! We need a bed in Trauma One!"
It was Rick, one of the veteran paramedics. I’ve known Rick for a decade. He’s a guy who has pulled people out of burning cars and train wrecks without breaking a sweat.
But tonight, Rick’s voice was shaking. His face was ashen.
I jumped out of my chair and sprinted toward the trauma bay. My lead nurse, Brenda, was already steps ahead of me, pulling on her blue latex gloves.
"What do we have?" I demanded, catching the gurney as they pushed it into the center of the brightly lit room.
"Six-year-old male. Brought in by his stepfather," Rick said, his breathing heavy. "Dispatched for a fall. The guy says the kid tripped and hit his face on a marble coffee table."
I looked down at the bed.
Sitting there was a little boy. He was so incredibly small. He wore a faded Spider-Man t-shirt that was easily three sizes too big for his frail frame.
His knees were pulled up to his chest. His tiny hands were gripping the metal side rails of the gurney so tightly that his knuckles were entirely white.
But it was his face that stopped me dead in my tracks.
His lips were sealed completely shut, clamped together with a terrifying amount of force. A thin, dark line of dried blood ran from the corner of his mouth down to his chin.
"Hey buddy," I said, keeping my voice as soft and calm as possible. "I'm Dr. Evans. You're in the hospital. You're safe now."
He didn't blink. He didn't nod.
His eyes were wide, dilated, and filled with a kind of raw, primal terror that you rarely see in a child. He looked like a trapped animal waiting for the trap to snap shut.
And he wasn't looking at me.
His eyes were darting frantically toward the glass doors of the trauma bay.
I followed his gaze. Standing just outside the room was a tall, heavily built man in a damp leather jacket. He was pacing back and forth, rubbing the back of his neck aggressively.
This had to be the stepfather.

Brenda moved in to attach the vitals monitor to the boy’s finger. The machine immediately started beeping at an alarming rate.
Heart rate: 165 beats per minute.
Blood pressure: sky high.
"He's panicking," Brenda whispered to me across the bed.
"I know," I muttered back.
I stepped closer to the boy. Let’s call him Tommy.
"Tommy, I know you're hurting right now," I said gently. "I just need to take a little look at your face, okay? I'm not going to do anything that hurts."
I reached out slowly, telegraphing my movements so I wouldn't startle him. My gloved fingers lightly brushed his jawline to check for swelling or fractures.
The moment my skin made contact with his cheek, Tommy violently threw his head back. A muffled, agonizing whimper escaped his closed lips.
He didn't open his mouth to cry. He kept his jaw locked tight, the muscles in his neck straining with the effort.
That was my first major red flag.
When kids are in pain, they scream. They cry. They open their mouths and wail. They don't clamp their mouths shut as if their life depends on it.
"Okay, okay, I'm sorry," I said, pulling my hands back immediately. "I won't touch. Just take deep breaths."
The doors to the bay slid open, and the heavy-set man in the leather jacket pushed his way into the room. The smell of stale cigarette smoke followed him.
"Look, doc, he's just being dramatic," the man said loudly, his tone annoyed rather than concerned. "He's a clumsy kid. He fell. Just give him some pain meds and let us go home. He's fine."
I turned to look at him. "Are you the stepfather?"
"Yeah. Greg," he said, avoiding eye contact with me. He kept staring at Tommy. "He just tripped. Right, Tommy? You just tripped."
Tommy didn't nod. He just stared at the blanket, his whole body trembling now.
"Greg," I said, my voice hardening just a fraction. "His heart rate is dangerously high and he's bleeding from the mouth. I need to do a full examination. I'm going to have to ask you to wait outside in the family room."
Greg crossed his arms, puffing out his chest. "I'm his guardian. I have a right to be here."
"Hospital policy," Brenda chimed in smoothly, stepping between Greg and the bed. "During initial trauma assessments, we need a clear space. Please, right this way."
Greg glared at Brenda, then shot a dark, warning look at Tommy.
"Don't cause trouble for the doctors, Tommy," Greg said. The words sounded normal, but the tone was laced with a chilling undercurrent.

With a heavy sigh, Greg turned and walked out of the room. Brenda hit the button to close the glass doors behind him, then subtly pulled the privacy blinds shut.
We were alone.
The moment the blinds closed, blocking Greg from view, Tommy’s shoulders dropped slightly. A heavy, shuddering breath hissed through his nose.
"He's gone, buddy," I said quietly. "It's just us in here. Me and Nurse Brenda."
Tommy looked at me. A single tear rolled down his cheek, cutting a clean line through the dried dirt on his face.
"Tommy, your stepdad said you hit your face on a table," I began. "But looking at your jaw, I don't see any bruising on the outside. The blood is coming from inside."
He kept staring at me. Pleading.
"I need you to open your mouth for me," I asked.
He furiously shook his head. No.
"I can't help you if I don't know what's bleeding," I reasoned. "Did you bite your tongue when you fell? Did you lose a tooth?"
He shook his head again. He raised his small, shaking hands and pointed at his throat.
"Your throat hurts?" Brenda asked gently.
Tommy nodded once.
"Okay. Well, I definitely need to look inside then," I said, pulling my penlight from my chest pocket.
Tommy backed up against the elevated head of the bed. He was shaking so hard the entire gurney was vibrating. He squeezed his eyes shut and gripped his mouth with both hands, physically holding his own jaw shut.
My stomach tied itself into a knot.
I’ve treated abused children before. I know the signs of fear. But this was different. This wasn't just fear of a needle or a doctor.
Tommy was terrified of what I was going to find.
"Tommy, look at me," I said, my voice dropping to a serious, commanding whisper.
He opened his tear-filled eyes.
"No one is going to hurt you in this room. Whatever is going on, I can fix it. But you have to trust me."
For a long, agonizing minute, the only sound in the room was the rapid beeping of the heart monitor and the rain hitting the roof.
Slowly, his tiny hands dropped from his face.
He took a deep breath through his nose. He looked at the closed blinds, then back to me.
His jaw muscles twitched.
With a look of absolute agony, Tommy slowly parted his lips.
The metallic smell of old blood immediately hit my nose.
I clicked on my penlight and leaned in, directing the bright white beam past his teeth and into the dark cavity of his mouth.
I expected to see a severe laceration. I expected to see a broken tooth pushed into the gums. I even prepared myself to see burns or signs of chemical ingestion.
I leaned in closer.
The light hit the back of his throat.
And my heart stopped beating in my chest.
I actually gasped out loud and stumbled a half-step backward, bumping into Brenda. My hand was shaking so badly the beam of the penlight darted wildly across the ceiling.
"Doctor?" Brenda asked, her voice tight with sudden alarm. "What is it?"
I couldn't speak. I couldn't form the words.
There was no medical condition on earth that could explain what I had just seen. There was no fall, no accident, no clumsy trip over a coffee table that could result in that.
Because lodged deep in the back of this 6-year-old boy's throat, anchored to his back molars with thick, industrial copper wire, was an object.
A deliberate, heavy, man-made object.
And it had a piece of paper stuffed inside it.
I stared at Tommy. The little boy just sat there, his mouth open, crying silently as the blood continued to pool on his tongue.
Someone had done this to him.
Someone had forced this into his mouth, wired it shut, and warned him never to open it.
And the worst part wasn't just the object itself.
It was what I realized the object was meant to do.
CHAPTER 2
For several seconds, nobody moved.
The bright trauma room suddenly felt impossibly small.
Tommy sat frozen on the hospital bed, tears streaming silently down his cheeks. The heart monitor beside him continued its frantic rhythm.
Beep.
Beep.
Beep.
I forced myself to take a slow breath.
"Brenda," I said quietly. "Close the room. No one comes in without my permission."
She looked at my face and immediately understood this wasn't a routine case.
"What is it?" she whispered.
I swallowed hard.
"Call hospital security."
Her eyes widened.
Then she nodded and reached for the phone.
Tommy watched us with desperate hope.
The kind of hope you only see in someone who has been terrified for far too long.
I crouched beside the bed.
"Tommy," I said softly, "I need you to know something."
He stared at me.
"You are safe right now."
His lower lip trembled.
"No matter who brought you here. No matter what they told you. Nobody is taking you out of this hospital tonight."
A fresh wave of tears rolled down his face.
It was the first sign that he believed me.
A minute later two hospital security officers arrived outside the room.
I stepped into the hallway.
Greg was pacing near the vending machines.
The moment he saw me, he straightened.
"What's taking so long?"
His voice carried irritation.
Not concern.
Not fear.
I had seen enough parents in emergency medicine to recognize the difference.
"Your stepson requires additional evaluation," I replied carefully.
Greg folded his arms.
"Then evaluate him."
"We are."
His eyes narrowed.
"Can I see him?"
"Not right now."
Something flashed across his face.
For a split second, anger replaced the mask.
Then it disappeared.
"Look, Doc," he said. "His mother is out of town. I'm the guardian. Whatever is happening, I need to know."
I stared at him.
Every instinct I had developed over fifteen years in pediatric emergency medicine was screaming at me.
Something was wrong.
Very wrong.
"I'll update you when we're finished," I said.
Before he could argue, I returned to the trauma bay.
The door locked behind me.
Inside, Brenda was helping Tommy sip a little water through a straw.
He looked exhausted.
Terrified.
But calmer.
I sat beside him.
"Tommy."
His eyes lifted.
"Can you tell me who put that object in your mouth?"
His entire body stiffened.
For a moment I thought he wouldn't answer.
Then he slowly looked toward the closed door.
Toward where Greg had been standing.
My stomach dropped.
"Greg?" I asked.
Tommy squeezed his eyes shut.
One tiny nod.
The room went silent.
Brenda covered her mouth.
I felt ice crawl down my spine.
"Why?" she whispered.
Tommy began shaking again.
I gently touched his shoulder.
"You don't have to tell us everything right now."
He looked at me.
Then he whispered his first words since arriving.
"He said it was a secret."
His voice was hoarse.
Raw.
Like he hadn't spoken much in days.
"He said if I told anybody..." Tommy swallowed. "Mom would disappear."
My chest tightened.
Children don't invent fear like that.
Someone had taught it to them.
Carefully.
Repeatedly.
Deliberately.
Twenty minutes later, the pediatric surgeon arrived.
After reviewing the situation, he immediately agreed.
The object had to be removed in the operating room.
Safely.
Carefully.
And with law enforcement present.
Because whatever was hidden inside it clearly mattered to someone.
A lot.
While preparations were underway, a social worker named Karen arrived.
Karen had spent twenty years working child protection cases.
She sat beside Tommy and patiently earned his trust.
Eventually he began speaking in fragments.
Short sentences.
Pieces of a larger puzzle.
Greg had entered Tommy's life two years earlier.
At first everything seemed normal.
Then strange rules started appearing.
Tommy wasn't allowed to have friends.
Wasn't allowed to visit neighbors.
Wasn't allowed to answer questions from teachers.
If anyone asked about home, Greg always had an explanation ready.
The boy was shy.
Sensitive.
Imaginative.
Troubled.
Every warning sign was dismissed before anyone looked too closely.
Then, three weeks earlier, things changed.
Greg became nervous.
Constantly nervous.
He started receiving phone calls late at night.
Locking himself in the garage.
Arguing with strangers.
Tommy didn't understand what was happening.
Until one night.
He accidentally saw something.
Something Greg didn't want anyone to know.
Karen listened carefully.
"What did you see?"
Tommy hesitated.
Then he whispered two words.
"A basement."
The room fell silent.
"A basement?" Karen repeated.
Tommy nodded.
"There were people."
The words barely escaped his mouth.
"Lots of people."
My blood ran cold.
Karen exchanged a glance with me.
The same thought had occurred to both of us.
Human trafficking.
Illegal confinement.
Something criminal.
Something huge.
But we needed facts.
Not assumptions.
Hours later, shortly before dawn, Tommy was taken into surgery.
The operating room team worked with extraordinary care.
The object was successfully removed.
When it was finally placed inside an evidence container, everyone in the room stared.
It wasn't money.
It wasn't jewelry.
It wasn't drugs.
It was a USB flash drive.
A small black flash drive.
Wrapped in plastic.
Alongside it was a folded piece of paper.
The paper contained only a few handwritten words:
"If anything happens to me, look under the house."
Nobody knew what it meant.
Yet.
By then police detectives had arrived.
The flash drive was transferred directly into evidence custody.
Greg, meanwhile, was still waiting downstairs.
He had no idea the situation had changed.
Detectives approached him in the family lounge.
Within minutes they noticed inconsistencies in his statements.
His timeline shifted.
Details changed.
Simple questions produced contradictory answers.
Then came the phone call.
The flash drive had been examined.
And everything exploded.
The drive contained hundreds of files.
Photographs.
Financial records.
Property maps.
Names.
Dates.
Transactions.
Enough evidence to launch multiple criminal investigations.
Enough evidence to make federal authorities interested.
Enough evidence to explain exactly why someone had gone to extraordinary lengths to keep a six-year-old child silent.
Because Tommy wasn't supposed to survive long enough to tell anyone.
He had accidentally become a witness.
By sunrise, law enforcement officers were executing emergency search warrants.
Several locations connected to Greg were raided.
Including a rural property outside Seattle.
And underneath that property...
They found the basement.
Exactly where Tommy said it would be.
What investigators discovered there would dominate headlines for months.
But none of that mattered to me in that moment.
Because while dozens of officers were racing across the city, I was standing in the pediatric recovery room.
Tommy had just awakened from surgery.
The wires were gone.
The fear was still there.
But something else had appeared for the first time.
Relief.
I walked over to his bedside.
"How are you feeling, buddy?"
He blinked slowly.
"Tired."
I smiled.
"That's normal."
He looked around the room.
"Is Greg here?"
The question broke my heart.
Not because he wanted Greg.
But because he was still afraid.
I gently shook my head.
"No."
Tommy stared at me.
"He can't come here anymore."
For several seconds he didn't move.
Then his tiny shoulders relaxed.
The tension he'd been carrying seemed to drain away all at once.
And for the first time since he entered my emergency room, Tommy smiled.
It wasn't a big smile.
Just a small one.
But it was enough.
Enough to remind every doctor, nurse, paramedic, and social worker in that hospital why we do this job.
Because sometimes saving a life isn't stopping the bleeding.
Sometimes it isn't performing surgery.
Sometimes it's helping a frightened child understand that the nightmare is finally over.
As dawn broke over Seattle and the rain finally stopped, golden sunlight streamed through the hospital windows.
Tommy looked toward the light.
Then back at me.
"Dr. Evans?"
"Yeah, buddy?"
He smiled again.
"Thank you for believing me."
And in fifteen years of emergency medicine, I don't think I've ever heard words that meant more.