United States | Off-target

The Trump shooting has made a mockery of the Secret Service

Protecting presidents requires communication, not just lots of men with guns

Secret servicemen cover Donald Trump at a campagn rally in Pennysylvania
Photograph: AP
|Pittsburgh

When trying to put in context how close Donald Trump came to being killed on July 13th, Anthony Cangelosi, a former Secret Service agent, now an academic at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, uses an analogy that the former president could appreciate. “It’s a chip shot,” he says. For the benefit of non-golfers: one that is easy for somebody who practises. “It’s not hard to hit a target from 150 yards with a rifle,” he says. The shooter, Thomas Matthew Crooks, a 20-year-old from a suburb of Pittsburgh (see box on next page), was a member of a rifle club, though he was apparently rejected from his high-school shooting team. Had he been a slightly better shot, America’s election would now look very different.

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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Off-target”

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