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FBI Director Questions If Bullet or Shrapnel Hit Trump in Shooting

Though a New York Times investigation published Friday concluded that a bullet likedly hit

Donald Trump, FBI Director Christopher Wray on Wednesday raised questions regarding the nature of the injury sustained by Donald Trump in the assassination attempt earlier this month, questioning whether it was caused by a bullet or by shrapnel, The Guardian reports. During a hearing on Wednesday in Washington, before the House judiciary committee, Wray told lawmakers that it was not clear what precisely caused the injury to Trump’s ear during the shooting at his campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, earlier this month. The burst of gunfire from a shooter on a roof with a sightline to the stage and crowd killed one rally-goer and left others wounded. “There’s some question about whether or not it’s a bullet or shrapnel that hit his ear,” Wray testified. “As I sit here right now, I don’t know whether that bullet, in addition to causing the grazing, could have also landed somewhere else.”


Shortly after the shooting, Trump said in a statement on Truth Social that he had been shot with a bullet that pierced the upper part of his right ear. After the shooting, Trump released a memo about his recovery from Ronny Jackson, the former White House doctor and current Republican representative, but the former president has not allowed the medical professionals who treated him to talk publicly about his condition. On Thursday, Jackson responded to Wray’s testimony in a post on X, calling Wray’s comments to lawmakers “absolutely irresponsible” and “politically motivated” against Trump. “What little credibility he may have left is GONE after recklessly suggesting Trump might not have been hit from a bullet,” Jackson said. “It was a bullet,” he added. “I’ve seen the wound!” Wray also testified to lawmakers on Wednesday that Thomas Matthew Crooks, the shooter who had attempted to assassinate Trump, had searched online for information about the 1963 assassination of former president John F Kennedy.

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