Trump shooter told boss he needed day off before assassination attempt, gave three-word reason: report

Thomas Matthew Crooks, who attempted to assassinate former President Trump on Saturday, asked his boss for that day off work because he had "something to do."

Jul 18, 2024 - 07:01
Trump shooter told boss he needed day off before assassination attempt, gave three-word reason: report

Former President Trump's would-be assassin would have been at work on Saturday, but told his boss that he needed the day off because he had "something to do," according to reports.

Thomas Matthew Crooks was shot dead by Secret Service agents after firing five rounds, grazing Trump's ear, killing firefighter Corey Comperatore and injuring two others at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

But law enforcement sources told CNN that the 20-year-old told his boss that he would be back at work on Sunday. 

Crooks listed himself as unemployed in 2020, but he worked most recently as a dietary aide at Bethel Park Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, a state-licensed transitional facility.

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The center's administrator, Marcie Grimm, said in a Sunday statement that Crooks "performed his job without concern" and his background check was clean.

Crooks' "newer model" phone and a gray 12-button remote transmitter were recovered from beside his body after he was shot, according to photos obtained by WPXI.

The transmitter is believed to have been connected to an explosive device in Crooks' car – investigators suggested in an interview with the New York Post that he may have planned to stage a distraction during the shooting. 

Although they have gained access to his phone and laptop, investigators have yet to determine a possible motive for Crooks' assassination attempt. But they are beginning to piece together a clearer picture of his actions leading up to the shooting that day.

Roughly three hours before the shooting, Crooks aroused suspicion when he passed through magnetometers at the rally's security screening area with a range-finder, which looks like a small pair of binoculars and is used by target shooters and hunters to measure distances when setting up a long-range shot. 

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A law enforcement source told Fox News Digital that a local officer saw a suspicious man carrying a range-finder "in or just-outside" the venue before Trump took the stage.

That sighting was shared with state police, according to the source, and there was a discussion about whether the man was carrying a pair of binoculars to try to see the rally better.

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Crooks was able to gain access to the building's roof by climbing on top of an air conditioning unit, ABC News reported.

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Fox News Digital's Michael Ruiz and Sarah Rumpf-Whitten contributed to this report.