🚨 LEAKED: What 6 Secret Service Agents Did Before Trump Was Shot — Details In First Comment 👇

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.”
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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.
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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.
Chapter 2: The Empire Answers The following morning... Blackwood Global headquarters looked nothing like the Morrison mansion. There were no insults. No laughter. Only discipline. Every executive stood the moment I entered the boardroom. Dozens of directors rose simultaneously. "Good morning, Madam Chair." Brendan had entered through another door accompanied by legal counsel. Not because he still worked there. Because he had been ordered to appear. He looked exhausted. He hadn't slept. Neither had Diane. Arthur projected several security videos onto the wall. The first clip showed Diane dumping filthy water over my head. The second showed Brendan laughing. The third captured Jessica mocking my pregnancy. No one spoke. Arthur closed the file. "Gentlemen..." "These events occurred while the Chairwoman was attending what she reasonably believed to be a private family dinner." "The individuals involved are senior company officers." "Their conduct presents catastrophic reputational risk." One independent director adjusted his glasses. "What are the recommendations?" Arthur didn't hesitate. "Immediate termination." "For cause." "Permanent forfeiture of executive compensation." "Cancellation of all unvested stock." Brendan shot to his feet. "You can't destroy twenty years of my career over one dinner." I looked at him. "It wasn't one dinner." "It was years." "You simply forgot that every insult leaves a witness." Arthur pressed another button. Human Resources files appeared. Witness statements. Expense fraud. Abuse complaints. Suppressed investigations. Everything Brendan assumed had disappeared. It hadn't. Someone had preserved every document. Me. The vote lasted less than thirty seconds. Twelve hands. Twelve yes votes. Zero against. Arthur looked toward Brendan. "Your employment with Blackwood Global is terminated." "Effective immediately." Security politely escorted him from the room. For the first time in his life... No one followed him.
Chapter 1: The Truth Walks In
The dining room became so quiet that the water dripping from my dress sounded deafening.
Every eye followed the man standing in the doorway.
He wore a tailored black suit with no company logo, no unnecessary decoration.
Just authority.
Behind him stood twelve members of executive security.
Not private bodyguards.
Corporate crisis response.
The team that only moved when the company's highest-ranking executive was under direct threat.
The security chief stepped forward.
Without looking at anyone else, he removed his gloves and bowed his head slightly.
"Chairwoman Blackwood."
"My deepest apologies for our delayed response."
"We arrived in nine minutes and forty-three seconds."
Brendan laughed nervously.
"Who the hell are you people?"
The security chief finally turned toward him.
"I'm afraid that information is above your clearance level."
Diane stood abruptly.
"This is our family home."
"You can't just walk in here."
The security chief calmly handed her a leather folder.
"Ma'am."
"You no longer have authority to give orders regarding anything connected to Blackwood Global Holdings."
She frowned.
"What nonsense is this?"
Arthur's voice suddenly came through the speakerphone resting on the table.
"It isn't nonsense."
"It is corporate law."
The room recognized his voice immediately.
Arthur Whitmore.
Executive Vice President of Legal.
The attorney who personally represented the board of directors.
Brendan's confident expression cracked.
"Arthur?"
"What are you doing on her phone?"
Arthur answered calmly.
"I work for Chairwoman Cassidy Blackwood."
"I always have."
Jessica stared at me.
"No..."
"That's impossible."
I quietly brushed wet hair away from my face.
"Is it?"
Arthur continued.
"Per Protocol Seven..."
"All executive access belonging to Brendan Morrison, Diane Morrison, and every immediate Morrison family member has been suspended."
Brendan nearly dropped his wine glass.
"What?"
"I run the European division."
Arthur corrected him.
"You ran it."
"Your badge was deactivated forty-three seconds ago."
Brendan pulled out his phone.
His company email vanished.
VPN disconnected.
Executive banking privileges froze.
His company vehicle tracking app logged him out.
His digital identity disappeared one system at a time.
Arthur spoke again.
"The board has been notified."
"So have federal regulators."
"And our compliance division."
Diane whispered,
"This..."
"This can't be happening."
I finally stood.
Water still dripped from my dress onto the marble floor.
"It already has."
Then I walked toward the door.
"Tonight..."
"You humiliated the wrong woman."