One Year Later: Secret Service Suspends Agents Over Trump Assassination Attempt, But No Firings

President Trump survived an assassination attempt last July, but the failures that nearly cost America its leader are only now facing accountabilityโ€”barely.

The Secret Service has suspended six agents without pay for 10 to 42 days over the shocking security collapse during the July 13, 2024, Butler, Pennsylvania rally, where a gunman opened fire, grazing President Trump and killing a father and firefighter, Corey Comperatore.

Yet, despite the catastrophic breach, not a single agent was fired.

โ€œSecret Service is totally accountable for Butler,โ€ admitted Matt Quinn, the agencyโ€™s deputy director, to CBS. โ€œButler was an operational failure, and we are focused today on ensuring that it never happens again.โ€

The agency acknowledged the suspensions only now as Congress prepares to release a scathing report detailing the breakdowns that led to the attempted assassination.

Secret Service agents shielding a bleeding President Trump during the Butler, Pennsylvania rally, July 2024

The Day America Nearly Lost a President

On July 13, 2024, Thomas Crooks, a rooftop gunman, opened fire at the Trump rally. President Trump was struck, blood visibly streaming down his face, before Secret Service agents rushed him off stage.

โ€œThey got him in the ear,โ€ one witness recounted as panic swept the crowd.

Two others were injured, while Corey Comperatore, there with his family, was killed shielding others. Crooks was neutralized by a Secret Service sniper, but the damage was done.

President Trump later called Comperatore โ€œan American heroโ€ and vowed to โ€œnever forget his sacrifice.โ€

President Trump with blood on his face surrounded by Secret Service, moments after the shooting

โ€œWe Arenโ€™t Going to Fire Our Way Out of Thisโ€

Matt Quinn admitted the agency โ€œfailed,โ€ but said they would not โ€œfire our way out of this.โ€ Instead, the six suspended agents, including supervisors and line-level detail members, were placed in restricted roles upon return.

Critics argue this accountability is insufficient, noting that federal agents can be terminated for far less than allowing an armed assassin to breach perimeters and nearly murder the President of the United States.

The Butler attack was followed weeks later by another foiled assassination attempt in West Palm Beach, Florida, forcing then-Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle to resign amid bipartisan outrage and investigations.

Secret Service command vehicles and armored agents at a Trump rally post-Butler incident

A Preventable Failure

A bipartisan House task forceโ€™s 180-page December report labeled the Butler incident โ€œpreventable,โ€ highlighting โ€œpreexisting leadership and training issuesโ€ that created the environment for this disaster.

Lawmakers revealed:

  • The Secret Service failed to coordinate with local law enforcement.
  • Communications were inadequate due to poor planning.
  • Surveillance lapses allowed the shooter to set up undetected.

Since Butler, the agency claims to have introduced military-grade drones and mobile command posts to improve coordination, a reactive measure that critics say should have been standard before the attempt on Trumpโ€™s life.

โ€œWeโ€™re laser focused on fixing the root cause of the problem,โ€ Quinn said.

Yet many within the Trump movement see this as too little, too late, demanding deeper structural reforms and questioning why nobody was fired for a near-successful assassination attempt on a sitting president.

A drone surveillance unit and Secret Service sniper posted during a Trump rally

Trump Demands Transparency

President Trump has ordered the Secret Service to provide him with โ€œevery bit of informationโ€ about the failed assassination attempts and the internal breakdowns that allowed them.

Sources close to the Trump administration say the President has demanded sweeping reviews to ensure โ€œit never happens again,โ€ calling for โ€œa top-to-bottom overhaulโ€ of security protocols.

โ€œThis was a catastrophic failure that almost cost this country its duly elected President,โ€ one Trump advisor stated. โ€œIf the Secret Service cannot guarantee the Presidentโ€™s safety, the American people deserve to know why.โ€

The upcoming Senate report on Butler is expected to shine further light on the cascade of failuresโ€”and may reignite calls for leadership changes within the Secret Service under President Trumpโ€™s second term.

The American people deserve accountability, and many are watching closely to see if the agency entrusted to protect the President will face real consequences for the day it almost didnโ€™t.

Memorial at Butler, Pennsylvania rally site with Trump supporters honoring Corey Comperatore and celebrating Trumpโ€™s survival