Trump nominates head of his personal security detail, Sean Curran, to lead Secret Service
President Trump announced Wednesday that he selected Sean
Curran, one of the agents who rushed on stage during the Butler, Pa.,
assassination attempt, to serve as director
of the Secret Service in his second term.
“Sean is a Great Patriot, who has protected my family over
the past few years, and that is why I trust him to lead the Brave Men and Women
of the United States Secret Service,” the president wrote in a Truth Social
post.
Trump, 78, touted Curran’s 23 years in the Secret Service
and his work as assistant special agent in charge of the Presidential
Protective Division during his first term.
The president noted that in that role, Curran had “direct
oversight and responsibility of multiple protectees, and enhanced security
plans for my residences.”
“Sean has distinguished himself as a brilliant leader, who
is capable of directing and leading operational security plans for some of the
most complex Special Security Events in the History of our Country, and the
World,” Trump added. “He proved his fearless courage when he risked his own
life to help save mine from an assassin’s bullet in Butler, Pennsylvania.”
Curran was one of several agents who piled on top of Trump
last July after a gunman opened fire on the then-presumptive Republican nominee
during a campaign rally in Butler, Pa.
He is standing directly to Trump’s left, wearing dark
sunglasses, in the iconic photograph of the bloodied 45th president raising his
fist in the air under the American flag just moments after the would-be
assassin’s bullet ripped through his ear.
“I have complete and total confidence in Sean to make the
United States Secret Service stronger than ever before,” Trump wrote.
The Secret Service came under intense scrutiny in the
aftermath of the Butler shooting over the numerous security failures that
resulted in the near-assassination, including not covering the roof from which
Thomas Matthew Crooks aimed his rifle at Trump and others in the crowd.
Former Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle resigned in
late July following the Butler shooting and was replaced by Acting Director
Ronald Rowe.
Trump, 78, was the subject of a second assassination attempt
last September, when Ryan Wesley Routh allegedly hid in the bushes with a rifle
outside Trump’s Palm Beach, Fla., golf course.
A Secret Service agent spotted the would-be assassin as
Trump was golfing and thwarted the plot, but the agency faced criticism for not
securing the perimeter of the property ahead of the GOP nominee’s golf outing.
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