Thomas Crooks acted strangely. Sometimes he danted in his room late at night. Other times, he spoke with his hands, waving.
These unusual behaviors intensified last summer, after graduating with high honors from a community college. He also visited a shooting field, grew up on his thin brown hair and looked online “a major depressive disorder” and “the depression crisis”. His father noticed the change – mental health problems took place in the family.
In the afternoon of July 13, Crooks told his parents that he was heading for the range and left the house with a rifle. A few hours later, he set up a roof during a presidential campaign rally in the west of Pennsylvania and tried to assassinate Donald J. Trump.
This scene was engraved in American history. After a ball blurred Mr. Trump’s ear, he raised his blood face, pumped his fist and shouted the words: “Fight! Fight! Fight!” Trump said God had saved him to save America, and the White House recently revealed a statue In the oval office commemorating the moment.
Almost-Miss revealed alarming security tricks that allowed an amateur sniper barely out of his teenagers to shoot a former president less than 500 feet distance. And that has galvanized the support of Mr. Trump, inspiring the voters who saw him as a just triumphant hero in front of the defamation campaigns, the incessant prosecution and even an attempted life.