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Rowe provides main points on the protective provisions.
WASHINGTON — Acting Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe will testify before a joint Senate committee on Tuesday and offer more key points about Secret Service communications at former President Donald Trump’s rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, where a man tried to assassinate Trump.
Rowe is expected to provide details on the security measures in place for former President Donald Trump’s rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13.
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Rowe is willing to tell senators that Secret Service leadership communicated directly with Butler’s Emergency Services Unit (ESU) or its equivalent to a SWAT team. The Service says it has exposed text messages that have been reviewed and interviews it has conducted with officials on the ground that give them a more complete picture of what happened. The text messages, according to one source, are addressed to a high-ranking official of the Butler ESU team; They detail the Butler official describing the workforce he had and some data on deployments, according to the source.
The ESU butler is guilty of helping to set up the security package outside the Secret Service bubble.
This showed that the Secret Service never had direct communication with Beaver County police, as ABC News reported Monday morning.
SEE ALSO: Communication breakdown: Beaver County SWAT team details Trump assassination attempt narrative
The source said the Secret Service was reaching out to Butler and that the Beaver County team was offering mutual aid to Butler.
Rowe was named interim director when director Kim Cheatle resigned. Before, it was number 2.
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