The Man Who Attempted to Assassinate Trump Was Reportedly “Having Conversations With Someone That Wasn’t There”

Pennsylvania is a man who tried to assassinate President Donald Trump last year during a campaign march that was mentally collapsing in the months before the shooting, New York Times Reports, with stories that he was speaking to himself and the digital records that revealed that he was looking at the killing of President John Kennedy in 1963.
Thomas Crocs, 20, was through most of the accounts a moderate university student to enjoy engineering and science, according to what he said. NewtonUntil the man who killed Trump almost became when his bullet was sponsored by the president’s head, which immediately led to a distinctive image of the challenging president who shakes his grip in a victory after the shooting.
Little was known about the fraudsters, whose mysterious motivation raised the theories of land conspiracy.
To reach the bottom of the case, reporters combed email, text and internet history, as well as interviews with people who know the fraudsters, who showed little evidence that he was planning to shoot the president.
The survey found that he was concerned about depression, while reading Trump, Biden, the FBI, and the purchase of weapons and ammunition. He even went to the point of building a bomb that was found after the shooting of his childhood house, although it did not explode.
But there was not much to suggest that he was able to kill.
“There was ambiguity of Thomas Crocs’s origin to madness,” said Clay Higgins, a member of the Republican congress from Louisiana who looked at the shooting. Newton.
The assassination attempt comes amid other works of random violence, starting with the killing of Luigi Manjeun to a health insurance executive to attack the New Orleans truck, which left more than ten people.
It is a difficult environment for the application of the law to work in it, because these types of attacks wander around the ideological spectrum. Political beliefs remain a full mystery.
If there are common denominators on these incidents, the Internet often plays a role, whether it is a catalyst for violence or as a supplier to collect weapons and knowledge.
The fraudsters relied on encryption to hide his paths. Mangeists created a three -dimensional pistol. Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the New Orleans striker, was publishing an Islamic voice preserving Soundcloud.
One of the other common denominators is that the three men have begun to isolate themselves from family and friends – which does not preach good for the community that increases itself and has the ease of access to weapons and online content.
More about President Donald Trump: Trump’s latest failed killer tried to buy a used missile from Elon Musk
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2025-06-09 21:23:00