FBI Director Kash Patel told Fox News Digital that the investigation was a "Day One priority" for the bureau. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
"Dan and I have been on this since we got here eight months ago. We not only had to maintain the chain of command to President Trump, but we had to remind the world that President Trump was the victim — one of the four victims — on that day," Patel said. "There are victims' rights rules that apply to him, and they don’t get erased because he is the president."
"We fully briefed the president, as a victim of this case, at the White House, providing him with all of the details of our investigation, and the president was satisfied with the results and where we left it," he said.
President Donald Trump is surrounded by U.S. Secret Service agents at a campaign rally, July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania. (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press )
"Four hundred and eighty-five FBI employees have been involved in some way, shape or form in this investigation," the official told Fox News Digital.
"The FBI around the world has conducted more than 1,000 interviews connected to this case," the official continued. "We’ve reviewed 2,000 tips that were submitted. We’ve served and executed more than 10 search warrants and 100 subpoenas. In that, we specifically analyzed 13 electronic devices that were associated with Crooks and his family members from his home in Bethel Park, Pennsylvania."
The official said the FBI examined "35 accounts linked to Crooks, including social media, bank and other online accounts."
"The FBI has been able to access all of the accounts," the official said. "There has been reporting to inappropriately and incorrectly state that there was encryption that the FBI was not able to get into — that is not true. We have been able to get into every single account."
The official said that Crooks maintained foreign-based email accounts from Germany and Belgium.
"The FBI was able to fully access those accounts within days of the attack," the official said. "Additionally, the FBI engaged with foreign partners who also provided all of the content of those email accounts."
"We can say with confidence that there is no communication, there are no emails that Crooks had that we have not been able to access," the official said.
"The home was completely swept. Every device in the home was collected and accessed fully," Patel said. "Reports say that we didn’t get into certain devices? That’s false. We got into all of the devices."
The FBI conducted a manual review of more than 500,000 individual electronic files and "engaged with a number of nations around the world to ensure that all leads were covered."
"When there was a lead about an overseas connection — the two instances where we became aware of the foreign accounts — the FBI reached out to foreign governments," the official explained.
Undated file photo of Thomas Matthew Crooks in a yearbook photo. (Obtained by Fox News Digital)
"Crooks posted on YouTube. Tepes is a Norwegian, nordic resistance member. He simply responded to content Crooks posted," Patel said, pointing to a comment Tepes made on a 2020-era video posted on the video-sharing platform by Crooks.
As for his online presence, Bongino said previous FBI leadership initially downplayed his digital footprint.
"The degree of his digital footprint was not messaged correctly at all by prior leadership," Bongino said.
The official told Fox News Digital that Crooks’ online activity largely took place in 2019 and 2020 when Crooks was just 16 years-old — nearly five years before the attack.
"He called our Republicans and Democrats. He went as far as saying ‘in my opinion, the only way to fight the government is with terrorism-style attacks.’ I won’t try to get into his brain," the official said. "But there is a limited record of him making political statements and advocating for political violence in 2019 and 2020."
The official detailed some of Crooks’ online behavior leading up to the attack, including on July 6, 2024, when he used his email account to register to attend the Butler, Pennsylvania, rally on the Trump campaign website. Crooks also searched "how far was Oswald from Kennedy?"
The official also said Crooks searched for what the weather would be in Butler, Pennsylvania, on the day of the attack, where the podium would be; and looked up directions from his home to the Butler Farm Show grounds, and directions from the grounds to the closest hospital.
"But Crooks left no manifesto. He had no seepage of any kind. He didn’t give any indication anywhere that he was going to do this or why he did this," the official said. "There are many instances in notable assassinations that they do want folks to know why they did it, but we don’t know that here, because Thomas did not leave any of those artifacts."
"The rage, the anger, I totally get it. I’m with you. He is a friend of ours, he was shot in the head on live television — we want an explanation too," Bongino said. "Where is the manifesto? The answer is — it doesn’t exist."
Officers surround Thomas Crooks on the AGR roof after counter-snipers killed him. (Butler Twp Police Dept.)
"The FBI can only investigate based on a lawful predicate to open," Patel said. "Does the American public really want the FBI scouring social media and content everywhere without a lawful predicate and trampling over First Amendment rights?"
Patel said that if someone had called in a lead, "immediately there would be action."
"But no one did that," Patel said. "No one."
"People are asking why we didn’t act on his posts on certain sites? No one in law enforcement knew who he was. No one referred him to law enforcement, and we do not monitor every single Americans’ use of YouTube and Google and Twitter and Facebook," Patel said. "Because then people come back and say to us—‘why are you on our First Amendment rights?’"
As for the weapon used to shoot the president, Crooks used a 223 rifle. Crooks’ father controlled access to the gun vault and the gun.
The weapon was used to fire eight rounds in the vicinity of the president and the stage. The official told Fox News Digital that there were 22 additional unfired rounds in the weapon, and a number of unused magazines that were located in his vehicle on a ballistic vest.
The officials all shot down any theories of a potential second shooter, noting that the individual near the water tower around the site was a Pennsylvania State Police officer.
An Allegheny County Police Bomb Squad car drives towards the home of Thomas Matthew Crooks, the suspected shooter of former US President Donald Trump, as the FBI carries out an investigation, in Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, on July 14, 2024. Donald Trump said that it was divine intervention that helped him survive an assassination attempt during a campaign rally in Pennsylvania, and called on Americans to unite. Rebecca Droke/AFP via Getty Images (Rebecca Droke/AFP via Getty Images)
"The device had a receiver on it which would receive a message from a transmitter in order to detonate," the official explained. "The receiver was positioned in the off position. Had it been positioned in the on position, and if it activated from the triggering device on the person, our assessment is that it would have activated. But the position was in the off position."
Patel told Fox News Digital that he "recreated what it would have looked like if the explosive device was in the on position."
"We walked members of Congress through a visual of what would have happened," Patel said.
"Because it seems so unlikely you would build a device and forget to turn it on — but he did," Bongino said. "That’s how it was found. Was it just stupidity?"
As for the crime scene in general, Patel, Bongino and the official explained that the FBI controlled the crime scene from July 14, 2024, at midnight until July 18, 2024.
"We do not hold the crime scene forever. We have to give it back — that is standard operating procedure," Bongino said.
Crooks’ body was removed from the roof by the Pennsylvania state coroner. In coordination with State Police, the FBI then "cleaned the roof with water, as we were going to release the scene."
Law enforcement officers gather at the campaign rally site for Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump is empty Saturday, July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania. (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press )
"The FBI did not make the decision to cremate the body," Bongino said. "The family did. It was their son. The FBI had nothing to do with this decision at all."
Meanwhile, Patel addressed criticisms from members of Congress who claim he has not turned over documents pertaining to the probe.
"Congress is accusing us of not turning over all of this stuff — but all of this stuff doesn’t exist. It is an empty narrative they’re firing into a vacuum," Patel said. "The very limited information we have not turned over is respective to victims rights. There isn’t some trove of documents that we haven’t sent over there."
Patel said the FBI has "fully debriefed the lawmakers."
"We’ve even had members of Congress come to Quantico in our lab facility there and walk them through the exact investigative steps, the video and audio recordings, the repercussions of the explosion that did not occur that day and how that would have impacted the people that were attending the rally, and so they have been given a full inside-view of what we did on those days," Patel said. "We gave them all of the material we are legally able to give them."
President Donald Trump speaks as FBI Director Kash Patel looks on during a news conference discussing the administration's crime crackdown in the Oval Office at the White House, Wednesday. (John McDonnell/The Associated Press )
Bongino added: "We are very confident in the outcomes of this investigation. We have pulled on every threat. We are absolutely confident, and if information surfaces, please, immediately get it over to us for instant action."
"I would ask the public — what motivation would Kash Patel and Dan Bongino possibly have to hide from their personal friend — not just their boss — the president — information about a crime where he was the victim?" Bongino asked. "I don’t understand what the motivation would be."
But Bongino quoted a line from the movie "A Few Good Men."
"No one is interested in guilt or innocence, they’re interested in someone to blame," Bongino quoted. "The public is pissed off. We get it. We sympathize with you. It couldn’t have just been this guy — it couldn’t have just been this guy — It is. There is no reason I would tell you otherwise."
"As to why people keep coming back to this on social media, the reality is, many people make a lot of money on social media pushing conspiracy theories for clicks," Patel said. "That is a fact."
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As for Trump, he told Fox News' Brian Kilmeade Friday that he has "confidence in Kash, a lot of confidence, and the DOJ, and they are giving me reports, and their reports are seeming to balance out, so I have confidence in these people."
"I wasn't confident with Christopher Wray, but this group, it is a different group," Trump said. "It's Kash, as opposed to Christopher Wray, and I have confidence in Kash."
Brooke Singman is a political correspondent and reporter for Fox News Digital, Fox News Channel and FOX Business.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/exclusive-fbi-concludes-trump-shooter-thomas-crooks-acted-alone-after-unprecedented-global-investigation