Trump rally shooting raises concerns of political violence.
A shooting
at a Pennsylvania rally on Saturday that injured former President
Donald Trump has heightened concerns about political violence and
increased awareness of past attacks and assassination attempts against
presidents and candidates.
In a social media post shared on Saturday night, Trump thanked law enforcement officials for their quick actions after he was "shot with a bullet that pierced the upper part of my right ear."
The Butler County district attorney confirms to CBS
Pittsburgh station KDKA that two people are dead — the gunman and an
audience member. Two law enforcement sources told CBS News the gunman was
killed by a Secret Service sniper. Two other attendees are in critical
condition.
Reporters heard numerous shots and Secret Service rushed
the stage. Video captured by CBS News shows Trump touching his ear and then
crouching to the ground. Some blood could be seen on his face.
Past direct attacks against presidents
and candidates
Direct assaults against presidents, presidents-elect, and
candidates have occurred on 15 separate occasions, with five resulting in
death, according to a 2008 report compiled by the
Congressional Research Service. Of the 45 individuals serving as president, 13
(or about 29%) have been subject to actual or attempted assassinations. That
number does not include the latest incident involving Trump.
At least seven of the past nine Presidents have been
targets of assaults, attacks or assassination attempts. The Congressional
Research Service report says presidents who survived attacks include Gerald R.
Ford (twice in 1975), Ronald W. Reagan (a near-fatal shooting in 1981), Bill
Clinton (when the White House was fired upon in 1994), and George W. Bush (when
an attacker threw a grenade that did not explode towards him and the president
of Georgia during an event in Tbilisi in 2005), and the latest Congressional
Research Service report, citing Secret Service as source, says also that there
have been attempts on former President Barack Obama, Trump and President Biden.
Two others who served as President were attacked, either as
a President-elect (Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1933) or as a presidential
candidate (Theodore Roosevelt in 1912, when he was seeking the presidency after
being out of office for nearly four years).
Two other presidential candidates —Robert F. Kennedy, who
was killed in 1968, and George C. Wallace, who was seriously wounded in 1972—
were also victims of direct assaults, according to the report compiled by the
Congressional Research Service.
Presidents who were assassinated
Four presidents — Abraham Lincoln, James A. Garfield,
William McKinley and John F. Kennedy — have been assassinated.
Of the 15 attacks listed in the report, only the Lincoln
assassination was the result of a broad conspiracy, the report says. But
conspiracy theories still surround many of these events.
In only one incident — the Lincoln assassination — was a
broad conspiracy proven, although such contentions have arisen on other
occasions. Only one other incident involved more than one participant — the
1950 assault on Blair House, the temporary residence of President Harry S
Truman. But no evidence of other conspirators emerged from the subsequent
investigation or prosecution.
Of the 18 attacks or assassination attempts on presidents
or presidential candidates, all but two involved firearms. All but two of the
attacks, both against Ford, were committed by men. All but one of the 15
assaults occurred within the U.S.
First documented attack against a
president
According to the Congressional Research Service, the first
attack occurred in 1835, when an attacker's pistol misfired against President
Andrew Jackson. The attacker, Richard Lawrence, was declared insane. He said
"Jackson was preventing him from obtaining large sums of money and was
ruining the country," the report says.
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