Kimberly Cheatle Says No Radio Communications Were Recorded on Trump Shooting Day
Third, why aren’t all radio communications recorded? In the digital age, this isn’t difficult. It does not require an enormous amount of inconvenience or storage space. This is also history. This is also, in the case of an assassination or attempted assassination, crucial to any ongoing investigation. You’re telling me some police officer in Nowhere, Iowa, can record everything with a body cam, but the United States Secret Service, with its eight billion dollar budget, cannot record radio communications when protecting the current frontrunner for the presidency?
This is bullshit.
This whole thing stinks of a conspiracy and cover-up, which is not something I say lightly. In this house, Oswald worked alone, the earth is round, Neil Armstrong landed on the moon, and putting fluoride in the water was a good idea. But this…THIS…?
Cheatle’s testimony was outrageous in its deflections and stonewalling. Her presentation was indefensible and suspicious in the extreme. She wasn’t testifying about something like the breakdown of the Obamacare site. A former president — and likely the next president— came within a millimeter of having his brains blown out.
On top of that are these gob-smacking security failures, none of which Cheatle refuted:
- The Secret Service left a roof a mere 450 feet from Trump’s line of sight unguarded.
- To defend this jaw-dropping oversight, the head of the Secret Service lied with the excuse that this roof was unsafe because it was so steep.
- The Secret Service denied numerous requests over two years to add additional security to Trump events.
- In the days after the assassination attempt, the Secret Service lied about not denying these requests.
- The Secret Service identified the wannabe assassin as a threat at least an hour before Trump took the stage.
- The Secret Service spotted the assassin on the roof at 5:51 p.m.
- The Secret Service still allowed Trump to take the stage at 6:02 p.m.
- The assassin was unmolested until 6:11 p.m. and only after he got off eight shots, one of which hit Trump and missed killing him by a millimeter or two.