logo
Top Trump advisor reveals ‘absolute chaos' behind the scenes of the Butler assassination attempt

Top Trump advisor reveals ‘absolute chaos' behind the scenes of the Butler assassination attempt

Independent13 hours ago
A top advisor to Donald Trump has revealed the 'absolute chaos' behind the scenes after the attempted assassination of the president exactly one year ago.
White House Communications Director Steven Cheung posted several pictures and videos he took leading up to the incident on July 13 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania.
The president had no specific public plans to observe the milestone, though he did attend the FIFA Club World Cup in New Jersey along with the First Lady.
The White House also posted two videos to mark the day, one of which included interviews with the family of Corey Comperatore, a firefighter who was killed in the shooting.
'One year later, there isn't a day that goes by I don't think about Butler,' Cheung wrote on X Sunday.
He said that after meeting with Vice President JD Vance at Trump's Mar-Lago residence and taping a Fox News interview, the president's motorcade traveled to Palm Beach Airport. From there, they flew to Pennsylvania.
'While on Trump Force One, we watched the pre-program speakers warming up the crowd at the Butler rally,' he wrote, also sharing a video of Trump getting introduced to the stage in Butler.
Shortly after, Trump was rushed to the ground by Secret Service agents after bullets rang out, with one clipping his ear and leaving him covered in blood. The president stood up and raised a defiant fist, while shouting 'Fight!' repeatedly.
Cheung shared the aftermath.
'When we arrived at the hospital, it was absolute chaos,' he wrote on X. 'Some media/reporters were grotesquely speculating something worse had happened (looking at you AP and Washington Post).
'We decided to put out a statement to reassure the President was OK.
'After the hospital, we motorcaded to the airport and held in a secure location until we could leave. This was what was playing on the tv screens as we watched the media coverage.'
Cheung added that when they finally went to board Air One to fly back to Bedminster, New Jersey, he had 'never seen so much security and personnel.'
He was later informed that TIME Magazine planned to put a photo of Trump with his fist raised, taken by Associated Press photojournalist Evan Vucci, on their cover.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police finish pizza delivery after arresting driver
Police finish pizza delivery after arresting driver

The Independent

time22 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Police finish pizza delivery after arresting driver

Police officers in Phoenix, Arizona, delivered a customer's pizza after arresting the original delivery driver. Footage released by Phoenix's Tempe Police Department showed officers handcuffing an individual before retrieving the food from his car. The officers informed the surprised customer at her door that her ' GrubHub guy got arrested but we're still delivering your pizza'. The police force shared the footage online, saying: 'The order was Hot-N-Ready, and the suspect was Caught-N-Steady.' Watch the video in full above.

Ukraine war briefing: Trump says he will send Patriot missile defence systems to Kyiv
Ukraine war briefing: Trump says he will send Patriot missile defence systems to Kyiv

The Guardian

time28 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Ukraine war briefing: Trump says he will send Patriot missile defence systems to Kyiv

Donald Trump has said he will send Patriot air defence missiles to Ukraine and that they are 'desperately' needed to defend the country because Russian president Vladimir Putin 'talks nice but then he bombs everybody in the evening'. The US president did not give a number of Patriots he plans to send to Kyiv but said the European Union would reimburse the US for their cost. 'They are going to pay us 100% for that, and that's the way we want it,' Trump told reporters on Sunday. The moves come amid a souring of Trump's relations with Putin and just two weeks after Washington said it would pause some arms deliveries to Kyiv. US senators touted a bipartisan bill that would arm Trump with 'sledgehammer' sanctions to use against Russia, ahead of the latest visit to Ukraine by US special envoy Keith Kellogg. Trump said he would make a 'major statement … on Russia' on Monday. Republican senator Lindsey Graham – a top ally of Trump – said on Sunday he had majority backing in the Senate for his bill, which was gaining momentum as US-led peace efforts in Ukraine struggled. The bill would allow Trump 'to go after Putin's economy and all those countries who prop up the Putin war machine', he told broadcaster CBS. Trump has indicated he would be open to the sanctions bill after repeatedly saying he is 'disappointed' with Putin over Moscow's deadly missile barrages against Ukraine. Nato secretary general Mark Rutte is set to meet Trump this week on the heels of the US president announcing plans to sell Nato allies weaponry that it can then pass on to Ukraine. Nato said Rutte would be in Washington on Monday and Tuesday and would meet with Trump, secretary of state Marco Rubio and defence secretary Pete Hegseth as well as Congress. French defense minister Sebastien Lecornu, meanwhile, said in an interview published on Sunday in La Tribune Dimanche that European officials had been making the case to the Trump administration to bolster air defence capabilities with any coming packages. He said France was in a 'capacity hole' and would have to wait until next year before being able to provide Ukraine new ground-to-air missiles. Ukraine's SBU security service has announced it tracked down and killed Russian agents they said had assassinated one of their members. A two-strong team – a man and a woman – had killed Col Ivan Voronich in Kyiv on Thursday, it said. 'A special operation was conducted this morning, during which members of the Russian FSB agent group put up resistance and they were eliminated,' the SBU statement on Sunday said. It did not specify how many people had been killed but the SBU posted a video in which two bodies were visible. The team that killed Voronich had spent time getting to know his daily schedule and routes, the SBU said. The UN nuclear watchdog said it had heard hundreds of rounds of small arms fire late on Saturday at Ukraine's Russian-occupied nuclear power plant at Zaporizhzhia. The International Atomic Energy Agency said on Sunday that the large number of shots – repeatedly fired for about an hour from 10pm local time – was unusual and that it was seeking further information. Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov met with his Chinese counterpart in Beijing on Sunday to discuss Ukraine as well as relations with the US. Lavrov arrived in China after a visit to North Korea, where he received assurances of support in its conflict with Ukraine. Lavrov and Wang Yi's talks included 'the outlook for settling the Ukrainian crisis', Russia's foreign ministry said.

Ellen DeGeneres supports Rosie O'Donnell after Donald Trump threatens to revoke her citizenship
Ellen DeGeneres supports Rosie O'Donnell after Donald Trump threatens to revoke her citizenship

Daily Mail​

time31 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ellen DeGeneres supports Rosie O'Donnell after Donald Trump threatens to revoke her citizenship

Ellen DeGeneres showed her support for Rosie O'Donnell, whose U.S. citizenship was put under threat. On Saturday, President Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social: 'Because of the fact that Rosie O'Donnell is not in the best interests of our great country, I am giving serious consideration to taking away her citizenship. She is a threat to humanity, and should remain in the wonderful country of Ireland, if they want her. God bless America!' On Sunday, Ellen shared the president's post and gave a shout-out to the 63-year-old comedian: 'Good for you @rosie.' Ironically, Ellen and Rosie have never shared more in common, being former TV titans who both left the U.S. following Trump's re-election last November. The show of support happened months after Rosie accused Ellen of never saying 'anything political in her life'. Rosie told Us Weekly: 'I've never really known Ellen to say anything political in her life, so I was surprised to read that she left because of President Trump. Like, that shocked me, actually. I've been a political person my whole life, not better or worse, it's just a different way to be in the world. I was very clear about the reason why I was leaving.' 'It's not like we're tenaciously opposed to each other. We're just very different people. We have had some stuff in the past that we never resolved. And not in any way as, as partners or lovers or anything like that, just as friends and comedians, but I wish her the best. I seriously do.' Reaction: Ellen shared the president's post and gave a shout-out to the comedian Rosie's 'past' comment was referring to when Ellen told Larry King that she didn't know Rosie and was not her friend, which deeply upset her because they were close in the nineties. 'Ellen wrote in a text, "I'm really sorry and I don't remember that,"' Rosie said in 2023, adding: 'It would never occur to me to say "I don't know her" about somebody whose babies I held when they were born. It wouldn't be in my lexicon of choices to ever say. When she was in a perplexing situation and people were saying things about her, I said, "Let me stand next to you and say that I'm Lebanese, too". When it was a downward media time for me, she didn't do anything.' Ellen is reportedly 'never coming back' to the States after moving to a farmhouse in the Cotswolds, England where she and her wife Portia de Rossi are raising chickens and goats. Career end: Ellen notoriously got 'kicked out of show business for being mean' after her former self-titled daytime talk show ended following 19 seasons after being hit with racism, workplace bullying, and sexual harassment claims in 2022 Meanwhile, Rosie and her child Dakota 'Clay' O'Donnell are getting used to life in Dublin, Ireland and she's 'in the process' of getting Irish citizenship. In response to Donald's latest diss, Rosie shared four posts on Saturday. She said: 'Hey Donald, you're rattled again? 18 years later and I still live rent-free in that collapsing brain of yours. 'You are everything that is wrong with America, and I'm everything you hate about what's still right with it. You want to revoke my citizenship? Go ahead and try, King Joffrey with a tangerine spray tan. I'm not yours to silence. I never was.' Reaction: In response to Trump's latest diss, Rosie spoke out on Instagram on Saturday Rosie also called Trump a 'mentally ill, untreated criminal' and 'a sexual-abusing liar out to harm our nation to serve himself'. She continued: 'This is why I moved to Ireland. 'He is a dangerous old soulless man with dementia who lacks empathy, compassion, and basic humanity. 'I stand in direct opposition all he represents - so do millions of others. [Are you going to] deport all who stand against [your] evil tendencies? [You're] a bad joke who can't form a coherent sentence.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store