While most of America slept in the early hours of the morning, an armed intruder carrying a twelve-gauge shotgun and a container of gasoline breached the secure inner perimeter of Mar-a-Lago — and was shot dead by Secret Service agents after raising his weapon into a firing position.
This was thefourth serious attempton President Donald Trump's life. And the mainstream media wants you to shrug it off like it's just another Monday.
It's not. None of this is normal, Patriots.
The suspect has been identified as Austin Tucker Martin, a twenty-something artist from North Carolina whose own mother had reported him missing. According to FBI Special Agent in Charge Brett Skiles and Secret Service Special Agent in Charge Rafael Berrios, Martin somehow penetrated the most heavily protected private residence in America armed and ready for violence.
When confronted by Secret Service agents and a Palm Beach County deputy, Martin was ordered to surrender. He complied initially, placing the gas can on the ground. Then he made the fatal decision to raise his shotgun into firing position.
The agents did exactly what their training demanded. Martin was killed on the spot.
Former Secret Service agent Bobby McDonald explained the grim reality those agents faced: "Nobody goes to work hoping to draw their weapon. But when a man raises a shotgun at you in the darkness on the grounds of a presidential estate, training takes over."
Hours after the shooting, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent did something remarkable — he told the truth on national television.
Bessent pointed the finger directly at the Democrat Party and their increasingly unhinged rhetoric. He specifically called out a profane Senate campaign commercial out of Illinois, demanding it be taken down immediately. His message was clear: the political climate being cultivated by the Left has become a breeding ground for normalized violence against conservatives.
Senator Marsha Blackburn is demanding answers about how the perimeter was breached in the first place. These are questions the corporate press won't ask because they're too busy memory-holing the story.
Source: Next News Network