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US media names suspect in Trump assassination attempt

Trump supporters gather around Mar-A-Lago, in Palm Beach, Florida. — Reuters
Trump supporters gather around Mar-A-Lago, in Palm Beach, Florida. — Reuters
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WASHINGTON: US media named Ryan Wesley Routh as the suspected would-be assassin of Donald Trump. US media said it was Routh, 58, who was arrested after US Secret Service agents "opened fire on a gunman" carrying an AK-47 style rifle near the boundary of Trump's Florida golf course where the former president was golfing on Sunday. The suspect had bolted out of the shrubbery he had been hiding in and escaped in a black car before he was tracked down by authorities.


Trump had been playing golf at his course in West Palm Beach, Florida, not far from his Mar-a-Lago residence, when the would-be shooter was spotted in bushes one hole ahead of the former president, Bradshaw said.


"President Trump is safe following gunshots in his vicinity," his campaign spokesman Steven Cheung said in a statement, while Democratic presidential hopeful Kamala Harris expressed relief her political rival was out of danger.


CNN and CBS reported Routh was a self-employed affordable housing builder in Hawaii who had an arrest record spanning decades and regularly posted on politics and current events, including sometimes criticizing Trump, the Republican presidential candidate.


One cause Routh expressed support for was Ukraine's fight against the invasion launched by Russia's President Vladimir Putin.


"I am willing to fly to Krakow and go to the border of Ukraine to volunteer and fight and die... Can I be the example We must win," Routh said in an X post in March 2022, according to the New York Times, which interviewed him.


AFP interviewed Routh in Kyiv in late April 2022, while he was taking part in a demonstration in support of Ukrainians trapped in the port city of Mariupol. "Putin is a terrorist, and he needs to be ended, so we need everybody from around the world to stop what they are doing and come here now," he said at the time. The United States has been a staunch support of Ukraine since Russia attacked in February 2022.


President Joe Biden will be replaced next January either by his Vice President Kamala Harris, who has indicated she will continue his policies of backing Ukraine, or by Trump, who would not say at a debate earlier this week whether he wanted Kyiv to win the war. — AFP


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