Alleged suspect behind Trump's apparent assassination bid revealed

Three accounts bearing Routh's name suggest he was avid supporter of Ukraine in its war against Russia

By
Reuters
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An undated selfie shows Ryan W Routh, a suspect identified by news organisations behind former US president Donald Trumps apparent assassination bid. — Reuters/File
An undated selfie shows Ryan W Routh, a suspect identified by news organisations behind former US president Donald Trump's apparent assassination bid. — Reuters/File

The former United States president and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has seemingly survived another apparent assassination bid after being shot and injured during a rally in Pennsylvania on July 13.

Authorities say the gunman attempted to assassinate Trump on Sunday at Trump's golf course in Palm Beach, Florida.

The suspect behind today's incident has now been identified by CNN, Fox News and The New York Times as 58-year-old  Ryan Wesley Routh of Hawaii.

The Secret Service said its agents were accompanying Trump on the golf course, when one who was securing holes ahead of Trump spotted a gun barrel in some bushes near the property line.

Multiple agents engaged the gunman and fired at least four rounds at him. The gunman then dropped his AK-47 style rifle, two backpacks, a Go Pro camera and other items and fled in a black Nissan car.

Palm Beach County sheriff Ric Bradshaw said a witness managed to take a photo of the suspected gunman's car and license plate and gave it to authorities.

Shortly after, sheriff's deputies in neighbouring Martin County stopped the suspect on Interstate 95 and took him into custody.

What we know about alleged shooter?

Reuters found profiles on X, Facebook, and LinkedIn for Ryan Routh, and public access to the Facebook and X profiles was removed hours after the shooting.

The three accounts bearing Routh's name suggest he was an avid supporter of Ukraine in its war against Russia.

On April 21, Routh directed an X message to Elon Musk, in which he wrote: "I would like to buy a rocket from you. I wish to load it with a warhead for Putin's Black Sea mansion bunker to end him. Can you give me a price please?"

The New York Times reported it had interviewed Routh in 2023 for an article about Americans who were volunteering to help the Ukraine war effort. Routh told the NYT he'd travelled to Ukraine and spent several months there in 2022 and was trying to recruit Afghan soldiers who fled the Taliban to fight in Ukraine.

On X in 2020, Routh expressed support for Democratic US presidential candidate Bernie Sanders and mocked Biden as "sleepy Joe."

Earlier this year, Routh tagged Biden in a post on X: "@POTUS Your campaign should be called something like KADAF. Keep America democratic and free. Trump should be MASA [...] make Americans slaves again master. DEMOCRACY is on the ballot and we cannot lose."

The suspected gunman's son, Adam, reached by Reuters at the hardware store where he works in Hawaii, said he had not yet heard of the newest Trump assassination attempt and had "no information," adding it was not something he believed his father would do.

Later, the reporter called back to the store and a colleague said Adam had gone home because of an emergency.

Another son of Routh's, Oran, told CNN in a statement that "I don't have any comment beyond a character profile of him as a loving and caring father [...] I don't know what's happened in Florida, and I hope things have just been blown out of proportion."

Furthermore, it has been revealed that Routh was previously interviewed by AFP in Kyiv, Ukraine in 2022 where he had travelled to support the war effort.

"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 during the interview.

"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 NYT.