FBI Confirms A Bullet Struck Trump's Ear in Assassination Attempt
Story Code : 1150304
“What struck former President Trump in the ear was a bullet, whether whole or fragmented into smaller pieces, fired from the deceased subject’s rifle," the FBI said in a statement, NBC News reported.
The statement comes two days after FBI Director Christopher Wray, whom Trump nominated to his post in 2017, told House lawmakers that "there’s some question about whether or not it’s a bullet or shrapnel that, you know, hit his ear."
Wray had testified about the FBI's ongoing probe into the assassination attempt. A gunman identified as Thomas Crooks, 20, was shot and killed after opening fire from an elevated post not far from Trump's July 13 rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, that left one spectator dead and two others critically injured.
The director's remarks before a House committee sparked widespread backlash among Republican lawmakers, as well as Trump, who has consistently said he was hit by a bullet.
The former president has not released any medical records from his treatment at the hospital after the shooting. His campaign previously released a July 20 letter from Rep. Ronny Jackson, R-Texas, a former White House physician, who said that he had evaluated and treated Trump’s wound “daily” since the shooting and that Trump had "sustained a gunshot wound to the right ear."
Trump referred to the new FBI statement in a social media post Friday night.
"I assume that’s the best apology that we’ll get from Director Wray, but it is fully accepted!," he wrote on Truth Social.
House Speaker Mike Johnson had also criticized Wray's testimony.
“We’ve all seen the video, we’ve seen the analysis, we’ve heard it from multiple sources in different angles that a bullet went through his ear. I’m not sure it matters that much,” Johnson said on Thursday.
Wray’s testimony came the same day the House approved a resolution to create a bipartisan task force to examine the assassination attempt.
Before the FBI put out its statement Friday night, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-SC, had written a letter to Wray urging him to revise his testimony, saying, "the attempted assassin’s bullet ripped the upper part" of Trump's ear, and that it "should not be a point of contention."
Graham said Friday night, after the FBI's statement, that Wray should never have suggested otherwise.
"Glad the FBI confirmed what everyone else knew. It was a bullet that struck President Trump. The statement by the FBI Director should’ve never been made," Graham wrote on X.