Ex-FBI Official: Would-Be Trump Assassin Ryan Routh Had ‘Inside Information’

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Ex-FBI Official: Would-Be Trump Assassin Ryan Routh Had ‘Inside Information’

A former top FBI official has said he believes would-be Trump assassin Ryan Routh must have had “inside information” to get as close to the 45th president as he did.

Routh was arrested over President Donald Trump’s second assassination attempt.

However, unanswered questions continue to mount, especially regarding how Routh got so close to Trump with a rifle and how he knew the 45th president would be on the golf course that day.

Trump’s visit to the Palm Beach golf course was a last-minute decision.

However, Routh reportedly flew from Hawaii to Florida and lay in wait for 12 hours before he tried to murder Trump.

Routh was arrested after allegedly pointing a rifle through bushes outside the Trump International golf course in West Palm Beach near where the former president was playing.

There are many questions about how and why Routh showed up at the golf course where Trump would be playing a round.

Authorities say he was armed with a rifle and supplies and had clearly planned the attack.

It’s unclear how Routh got so close to Trump without being discovered sooner, especially since there was already one attempt in July to take his life.

Moreover, Trump does not make his daily schedule public, which begs the question of how Routh knew where Trump would be and when.

A former top FBI official said this could point to one of several possibilities, including that the gunman was tipped off in Trump’s orbit, the UK Daily Mail reported.

If that’s the case, Trump could be in continued danger.

The former FBI official said there were one of three “possibilities” to explain this lapse in security.

“One is this guy had inside information, and having enough time to get to that fifth hole—that location between the fifth and sixth hole—and get himself set up,” the source told the Daily Mail.

When examining the timing, the likelihood that someone fed Routh this information becomes apparent.

“So if somebody tipped them off, at the time Trump went off the first tee, it would have been about an hour and 15 hour and 20 minutes before he got to that spot,” the former FBI official said.

They noted that it would give Routh “plenty of time” to set up.

“The other possibility is that he’s been surveilling the former president, and either a watching Mar-a- Lago as to when when he leaves, or actually physically following him and his vehicle and determining exactly where he went,” the source continued.

This is questionable as the Secret Service around him would likely spot when they’re being tailed.

The former FBI official had a third theory: Routh simply “got lucky” in guessing Trump would be at that club on that day.

Trump often golfs, but the source thinks some happenstance is the least likely explanation.

“I don’t think that’s the case,” the former official concluded.

“I think it’s one of the first two, and neither one of them has good implications.”

It appears the investigators have similar suspicions about Routh’s ability to access the GOP presidential candidate.

According to the New York Post, several club workers were asked whether they shared information with someone else.

One employee told the Post that the Secret Service and FBI “asked a couple questions about who I tell when President Trump is here.”

“They asked everyone if we tell our friends when he comes and goes,” the worker added.

Workers are strictly prohibited from sharing that Trump is at the club.

“They’ve told us for a long time that we are putting him in danger if we text a friend to say that he’s here, even if the friends are fans of him,” the staffer said.

“So I have never once done that, and I don’t think a lot of my coworkers have either.”


They also denied seeing or even knowing Routh after authorities showed them photos.

“Everyone was actually really nice to us; they said that we weren’t suspected of anything, and they made sure I wasn’t too shaken up when they started talking to me,” the worker said.

It’s reasonable to believe that there was some tip-off to Routh that Trump would be there that day.

Only time will tell, but it’s reasonable to explore several theories in the meantime, including that an insider betrayed him.