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Watch: Trump gunman caught on video before shooting starts

A video acquired by the tabloid website TMZ appears to show the suspected gunman who shot at former President Donald Trump before the shooting, and then shows the suspect again after he was killed by Secret Service agents. The video appears below or at this link.

According to the TMZ report, the clip "shows the moment the gunman opened fire at the Butler, PA rally Saturday -- and you can see the guy looking through either a scope or iron sights on a roof ... with people watching down below and freaking out, their panic palpable."

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'Going to be like The Purge tonight': Milwaukee reacts to Trump shooting

MILWAUKEE — In the hour after former President Donald Trump was apparently struck in the ear with a projectile at a rally in Pennsylvania, people preparing for the Republican National Convention in Wisconsin met the news with a mixture of shock, bewilderment and vigilance.

Michelle Altherr, a Republican National Convention delegate from Arizona, stood outside Fiserv Forum and raged: “When you think about it, you’re like, no, this just ramped up to another level. If you thought we were MAGA and extreme before, we went to another level now. When you see on the video Trump is mouthing 'fight, fight' — oh, no, he didn’t have to say it. We’re at another level.”

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Billboard battles: Fight over Trump waged on Milwaukee's roads

MILWAUKEE — When visitors land at Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport, they are deluged by huge billboards for the Heritage Foundation, the Washington, D.C.-based conservative group behind the highly contentious Project 2025 "presidential transition" plan.

But the political debate over presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump and his policies immediately spill out on the roads and highways into the downtown Milwaukee, the site of the Republican National Convention.

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Project 2025 group makes immediate splash at Republican National Convention

MILWAUKEE — For attendees of the Republican National Convention, there’s nothing remotely subtle about the role of the Heritage Foundation — the Washington, D.C.-based conservative group behind the highly contentious Project 2025 "presidential transition" plan.

Fly into Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport, and the first evidence that the GOP convention is taking place in this Wisconsin city is a set of giant signs that read: “Heritage welcomes you to the RNC Convention in MKE.”

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‘Gonna be insanity’: Inside how Milwaukee Police will secure the Republican convention

As eight Republican presidential candidates descended upon Milwaukee last summer for a Fox News debate, the last thing on any politician’s mind were seemingly silly photos of Iowa women Heather Ryan and Kara Ryan.

In one selfie image, Heather, now 52, flashes a thumbs up while wearing bedazzled pink glasses and a “Navy Vet” visor alongside Kara, her 29-year-old niece, and the state trooper who was kicking them out of last year’s Iowa State Fair — for blowing whistles during then-Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis’ conversation with Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds.

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These two former Trump White House staffers now appear in federal inmate register

Inmate number: 05635-509.

That’s how Steve Bannon is known according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons — the latest former White House staffer from the Donald Trump administration to report to prison.

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Trump’s ‘secretary of retribution’ has a ‘target list’ of 350 people he wants arrested

Retribution is at the center of Donald Trump’s third presidential election campaign.

“I am your warrior,” Trump proclaimed earlier this year. “I am your justice, and for those who have been wronged and betrayed, I am your retribution.”

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BUSTED: Three members of Congress violate federal financial law

Two Republicans and one Democratic member of Congress violated federal law with late financial disclosures — as much as a year late in some cases, according to new federal filings.

Reps. Buddy Carter (R-GA) and Brandon Williams (R-NY) appear to be new violators of the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act, and Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL), a repeated offender, is late disclosing a stock trade for a third time.

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'Extremely painful': Republicans blast Kevin McCarthy’s 'pathetic' revenge tour

WASHINGTON — Kevin McCarthy’s 2024 revenge tour is far from over.

Next stop: Arizona, where McCarthy, the former House speaker, hopes to exact 10 pounds of flesh from one of the eight Republicans who orchestrated his inglorious ouster last year.

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What the ‘Kids Guide to President Trump’ does not tell your children

To understand what’s inside the Kids Guide to Donald Trump, 2024 Edition — a new, nationally marketed booklet aimed at pre-teens — one must first appreciate what isn’t.

The guide makes no mention of Trump’s 88 felony charges across four separate criminal cases.

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Thief steals Vermont Democratic Party debit card, hits FanDuel sports betting site

The Vermont Democratic Party is one of many political fundraising committees that have fallen victim to theft during the past couple of years.

But it’s the only one where the thief deposited the stolen funds into a sports betting account.

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Giuliani lost his law license — but not his honorary degrees from these five universities

Rudy Giuliani may have lost his New York state law license this week for undermining the “integrity of this country’s electoral process” and misconduct that “cannot be overstated,” a Manhattan appeals court ruled.

But at one of New York state’s most notable colleges, Giuliani’s honorary law degree from the Syracuse University College of Law is still safely in the hands of the former New York City mayor and Donald Trump lawyer — for now, the school confirmed to Raw Story.

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Trump’s spokeswoman preaches fiscal responsibility. But she has a debt problem.

Karoline Leavitt, Donald Trump’s presidential campaign press secretary and an outspoken fiscal hawk, has more than $100,000 in debt from her failed 2022 run for Congress, according to Raw Story’s review of Federal Election Commission records.

The filing by Karoline for Congress earlier this week shows the committee saddled with $105,605 in debt against $12,816 cash on hand as of June 30.

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