An Army sniper demolished Secret Service officials over the Trump shootings

U.S. Army photo by Cpl. Bertha Flores, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

A gunman tried to assassinate Donald Trump.

Then another one tried to kill the former President.

And an Army sniper demolished Secret Service officials over the Trump shootings.

Second gunman tries to kill Trump

A second gunman attempted to assassinate Donald Trump, this time at a golf course.

Ryan Routh, whose brain was broken by Democrat-controlled media propaganda, reportedly lay in wait for Trump for up to 12 hours with an AK-47 and a scope.

The Secret Service spotted Routh and opened fire.

He fled the scene but was eventually arrested.

No statements have been made by Routh or any representation, but his motive could not have been any clearer.

He wrote to Joe Biden on social media in April of this year, “Your campaign should be called something like KADAF. Keep America Democratic and free. Trumps should be MASA … make American slaves again master. DEMOCRACY is on the ballot and we cannot lose. We cannot afford to fail. The world is counting on us to show the way.”

The Secret Service is most certainly under the microscope after a second attempt on Trump’s life.

Congressman calls out unforgivable security failures

Rep. Cory Mills (R-FL), a retired Army sniper, wrote on social media, “As many can confirm, it’s not the position or title in which you hold that determines a person’s level of risk. Therefore, the assets and resources the Secret Service provides should be determined upon the type of threats and what it takes to mitigate them. I’m thankful the Fmr President is safe, but demand increased assets and precautions based upon risk assessments.”


Mills has been one of the most outspoken Congressmen in terms of scrutinizing the Secret Service and demanding answers for the agency’s failures in defending Trump.

After the first assassination attempt at the rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, Mills said during a CNN interview, “I’ve done thousands of counter-sniper operations with our teams, in Iraq and Afghanistan, et cetera. The amount of negligence, the amount of mistakes that were made here … I have a very difficult time not leaning myself towards this was intentional as opposed to fecklessness.”

Interviewer Kate Bolduan balked at the implication.

Mills continued, “From a perspective of someone who’s actually conducted these, these are not difficult advances. . .This is about looking at your surroundings. What is my green go and red route? Which is your route out, in case. What is my actual elements that I need to be looking at as far as mitigating threats or risks or increased levels? Where’s my range fan for the sniper that says, ‘Okay, here’s my 100, my 200, my sketch, here’s an area where someone could shoot.’”

After a second attempt on Trump’s life, Mills’ suggestion that the security failures were “intentional” could have legs.

Trump’s schedule was not publicly known.

Routh had no business getting close enough to be a credible threat.

Trump had been requesting additional security for a long time, but Joe Biden rebuffed him.

Maybe now the Biden-Harris administration will listen.

The Secret Service has a lot to answer for.

Stay tuned to Unmuzzled News for any updates to this ongoing story.

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