logo
The woman who witnessed the assassination attempt against Trump

The woman who witnessed the assassination attempt against Trump

New York Post29-06-2025
'When you're a reporter, there's always this understanding that you are chronicling a thread of history.' So says author and long-time New York Postcontributor Salena Zito, whose new book 'Butler: The Untold Story of the Near Assassination of Donald Trump and the Fight for America's Heartland' details her experience standing mere feet from President Trump when he was shot on July 13.
9 The iconic image of Pres. Trump standing after he had been shot, blood pouring from his ear — but insisting on continuing the fight onward.
AP
Zito was hardly new to being in such close proximity to the president. A longtime chronicler of his unlikely political ascent, they enjoyed an unexpected camaraderie fueled by an affection for family. 'Salena, it's so great to see you. How are you doing? How are all those grandkids?' Trump said to Zito just before he took that fateful Pennsylvania stage. 'I love my grandkids, too. I love being around them,' he concluded.
Advertisement
Within minutes, in a typical Trumpian display of patriotism, country star Lee Greenwood was singing 'God Bless the USA'; minutes after that, Thomas Matthew Crooks fired eight rounds at Trump, nearly killing the president and sparking nationwide shock and history-making.
'I knew as soon as I heard those first shots, I had an obligation to be calm,' Zito says, 'because what I was covering wasn't just a tiny thread of modern history. It was an event that was going to change everything.' Here, in an exclusive excerpt from 'Butler,' Zito describes the day she stood alongside history in the making.
9 Thomas Matthews Crooks, who shot Pres. Trump, during his high school graduation.
Obtained by NY Post
Advertisement
——–
I felt the velocity in the same split second that I heard the four gunshots. My eyes were fixated on [then] former president Donald Trump, who stood a mere few feet away from me on an outdoor stage in front of the podium. It was July 13, 2024. I was in the buffer zone with my daughter, Shannon Venditti, and my son-in-law Michael.
Shannon looked over at me and asked, 'Why are there fireworks?' I knew they weren't fireworks and, subconsciously, she did too. We are gun owners. Shannon didn't want to think this could be happening; a mother of four, she didn't want to believe we were in the line of fire. I heard her yell to Michael, 'Did you trip on the speaker wires and cause them to spark?'
My gaze never left the president. Everything happened simultaneously, seemed to happen in split-second layers. I saw him flinch. He grabbed his ear. I saw the blood streak on his face as the bullets cut across the stage, and he ducked down below the podium.
Advertisement
'Get down, get down, get down!' a male voice shouted from behind me, directed at the president.
9 Crooks was quickly neutralized by officers after he attempted to kill Trump during a rally in Pennsylvania just over a year ago.
Obtained by NY Post
My initial thought was that the podium would not protect him — please, someone get there to protect him. Please let no one be hurt. It never once occurred to me that I might be one of them. I was frozen, still staring at the president seconds later, when we heard a second round of four shots. By then, President Trump was surrounded by a sea of navy-blue: at least a half dozen Secret Service agents formed a protective shield around him.
From the huddle, I could hear a female agent say, 'What are we doing? What are we doing?' Then, 'Where are we going . . .' and the sound of her voice was muffled.
Advertisement
Michael shouted as the second four shots went off: 'Those were gunshots!' He tackled Shannon to the ground and dropped on top of her. The next thing I knew, I was knocked off my feet and shoved to the ground by lead Trump press advance man Michel Picard III. Hovering over me, he held me down, his knees pressed against my shins. My face landed in the dirt and gravel, and the rest of my body covered my daughter.
'Are you okay? Are you okay?' Picard shouted at the three of us. Then he lowered his voice and took a deep breath. I could hear him slowly exhale to regain control.
9 Trump campaign advance person Michel Picard and members of the press take cover following the attempted assassination against Trump.
Getty Images
'Stay down. I got you. Stay still, stay calm,' Picard said. His voice was soothing, but his hands told a different story; he was shaking hard. I watched him look down at his hands as he tried to stifle the adrenaline.
I was still just feet away from the president. From my vantage point, I could see the huddle of blue suits surrounding him; I saw his bloody face between the gaggle of men and women around him. An agent said, 'Go around to the spare, go around to the spare . . . hold, hold, when you're ready, on two.'
Or maybe he said, 'When you're ready, on you.' I wasn't sure.
Time seemed to stop. Everything occurred in slow motion. The crowd, eerily, was not screaming, not really. In fact, it sounded like they were still cheering. On the ground, with gravel digging into my legs and arms, I could hear only one woman screaming. Her screams were primal — I don't know if she was hurt, if someone she loved was hurt, or if the trauma was too much for her. It seemed like she was moving around in the stands behind me, moving toward something that was across from me. Her screams were gut-wrenching.
9 Confusion and chaos at the scene of the Trump shooting, which spared Trump's life, but caused the death of a young father who was caught in the crossfire.
Shannon Venditti
Advertisement
One or two of the last four shots sounded like they came from a different-caliber gun.
I could hear President Trump talking back and forth with members of his detail, who were still tightly circling him. At least three male voices were talking. One said, 'Ready. Move up.' A different one said, 'Go, go, go!'
But they remained crouched down. Another agent said, 'Hawkeye's here, moving to the spare.'
'Spare, get ready. Spare, get ready,' said the agent who, from my vantage point, seemed to be the lead. At least two, maybe three of the agents then shouted, 'Shooter's down. Shooter's down — are we good to move?'
Advertisement
A male voice answered, 'Shooter's down. We're good to move.' A female agent asked, 'Are we clear?'
Someone said yes, they were clear to move. Their protective circle became mobile as they stood up with Trump, keeping a circle around him. I heard Trump say, 'Let me get my shoes, let me get my shoes.'
9 Pres. Trump approaches the stage to address his supporters on that fateful day in Butler, PA.
Shannon Venditti
An agent said something like, 'I got you, sir,' and Trump said again, 'Let me get my shoes on.'
Advertisement
I could see Trump's silhouette, and it looked like he was trying to put on his shoes, which one of the agents had knocked off. An agent told him, 'Hold on, sir, your head is bloody.'
Trump was insistent. 'Let me get my shoes.' A female agent relented. 'OK.'
As they slowly started to move, I heard Trump say, 'USA! USA! USA!'
The detail raised him to face the crowd. He lifted his fist, pumping the air: 'Fight. Fight. Fight.' His voice was raspy. The crowd erupted in joy and relief.
Advertisement
An agent urged, 'We got to move, we got to move.'
9 Barely days after he was shot and almost died, Trump returned to Pennsylvania where he rallied his voters during as his re-election campaign carried on through last summer.
Shannon Venditti
They exited the stage, and I saw him raise his fist again three times. The crowd was shouting now: 'USA! USA!' as he and the agents headed toward where I was lying on the ground. A Secret Service agent in full camouflage crouched over me, looking into my eyes, and aimed his AR-style rifle directly at me as the president made his way toward me. The agent and I exchanged glances, but I was oddly not afraid.
Trump and all the agents moved past me. I could barely see his face, but I saw enough to notice the blood running down his cheek. Press Secretary Picard hadn't moved. He was still on top of me, in a protective stance, and I could feel his knee digging into my calf. I thought, That's going to leave a mark. My daughter, Shannon and son-in-law Michael were still underneath us.
Shannon and I both tried to take photos, but Picard and Michael were having none of it. 'We don't know if there is another shooter,' Picard said firmly, so we didn't move.
Trump did not have his MAGA [Make America Great Again] hat on as they moved him past me. I saw his hat fall at some point while they were huddling. An agent miraculously grabbed the hat before it touched the ground and was still holding onto it while holding onto the former president.
I turned just enough to see past the loudspeaker that was behind us and watched the agents help Trump get into a vehicle, which they then surrounded. The motorcade paused for a moment, and then he was gone.
9 Author Salena Zito walking with Pres. Trump when he returned to Butler, PA in October of last year. Zito says that she and Trump enjoy chatting about their grandchildren
Graeme Jennings
I thought back to the early morning. None of what had been planned that day had placed the three of us in the buffer zone by the president. I let out what I thought was going to be a deep sigh, but it somehow turned into that kind of little laugh you have when your day has gone haywire.
Shannon said, 'Are you okay?'
I laughed just a little bit again; it felt like the only release I had in me at that moment. 'Yeah, I'm okay. Remember when the thing I was most worried about this morning was getting here on time?'
Excerpted from Butler by Salena Zito. (Copyright 2025) Used with permission from Center Street, a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What the new China chip taxes tell us about doing business in Trump's America
What the new China chip taxes tell us about doing business in Trump's America

Business Insider

time2 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

What the new China chip taxes tell us about doing business in Trump's America

Depending on your age, you might think I'm describing Soviet-era Russia — or Russia in the Putin era. You'd certainly think about modern-day China, where the government is an official partner in many private companies, and has unofficial but meaningful influence over most of them. And in 2025, you might also think that's beginning to describe America in the second Trump administration. Last week, for instance, Donald Trump called on the CEO of Intel to resign because of his past business connections to China. In June, Trump approved Nippon Steel's plan to buy US Steel — but only after the US government was granted a " golden share" in the company that gives Washington the ability to approve or veto some actions, like closing plants. In January, Trump floated the idea of having the US government own a portion of TikTok's US operations. And now Trump is requiring Nvidia and AMD to hand over 15% of revenue from high-end chip sales to China, as first reported by the Financial Times. (Nvidia has released a statement noting it "follow[s] rules the US government sets for our participation in worldwide markets," without addressing reports about the deal directly; AMD and the White House have yet to comment.) You can make arguments for or against any one of these transactions — US chip sales to China have been a particularly divisive issue, even within the Trump administration. But taken together, there's little question that in Trump 2.0, we should expect the federal government to insert itself into private business. Call it "state capitalism, a hybrid between socialism and capitalism in which the state guides the decisions of nominally private enterprises," Wall Street Journal columnist Greg Ip wrote Monday morning. It's an exceptionally timely piece he appears to have written before the Nvidia/AMD story broke, because it doesn't contain any reference to it. (You can make the list of Trump's interventions even longer if you'd like: He personally required former Paramount owner Shari Redstone to pay him $16 million to settle a seemingly specious lawsuit, for instance. And Brendan Carr, the Trump-appointed head of the Federal Communications Commission, has required Paramount's new owners to promise to " root out the bias that has undermined trust in the national news media." You could also include the concessions Trump is demanding from some of the nation's most prestigious universities and law firms.) The chip story is particularly hard to get your head around, since it inverts the premise of the tariff plans Trump has been pushing this year. Instead of taxing goods made overseas and imported into the US, the US is now taxing goods made by American companies, in America — the thing he supposedly wants to see much more of. It's not surprising to see Donald Trump say one thing and do another. And half a year into his second presidency, it's no longer surprising to see the Republican-controlled Congress let him do just about anything he wants: This is the same Congress that passed a law last year requiring TikTok's US operations to find a US buyer or shut down — and hasn't said a word about the fact that Trump has decided to ignore that law, repeatedly. And again, you might not care about the moves the Trump administration has made to steer companies to date. You might even like them. But the odds are increasing that he's going to end up involving the federal government in an industry or company you do care about. Maybe one you work in. How are you going to feel about it then?

Trump sends National Guard to Washington D.C., expands L.A. military tactics
Trump sends National Guard to Washington D.C., expands L.A. military tactics

Los Angeles Times

time3 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Trump sends National Guard to Washington D.C., expands L.A. military tactics

In an expansion of tactics started in June during immigration raids in Los Angeles, President Trump on Monday announced he would activate 800 National Guard troops in Washington, D.C. to help 'reestablish law and order' and 'take the capital back.''Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged out maniacs and homeless people,' Trump said at the White House briefing room.'It's liberation day in D.C,' he who sent roughly 5,000 Marines and National and Guard troops to Los Angeles in June in a move that was opposed by California Gov. Gavin Newsom and L.A. Mayor Karen Bass, is invoking section 740, of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, that places the DC Metropolitan police Department under direct federal control.

60 percent blame Trump for high costs amid expensive Air Force One, ballroom projects
60 percent blame Trump for high costs amid expensive Air Force One, ballroom projects

The Hill

time3 minutes ago

  • The Hill

60 percent blame Trump for high costs amid expensive Air Force One, ballroom projects

The U.S. economy isn't in a recession — yet. And hopefully, it won't be. But according to Moody's Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi, the number of industries cutting back on headcount is … well, concerning. Meanwhile, Americans are struggling — grappling with debt, the rising cost of living, and a general sense that their dollar just isn't going far enough. And they're not just blaming 'the economy' in the abstract. Six out of 10 Americans say the Trump administration is driving up their cost of living, according to a new Morning Consult poll. But there's one person who doesn't seem to be feeling the pinch. President Donald Trump is spending millions of dollars and accepting literal gold gifts, which feels wildly out of touch with everyday Americans. Last week, Donald Trump received a glass disc with a 24-karat gold base from Apple CEO Tim Cook. Earlier this year, he accepted a $400 million jet from the Qatari royal family, worth over 100 times more than all foreign gifts given to U.S. presidents combined since 2001. And get this: it could cost up to $1 billion to renovate. He's also reimagined the Oval Office, drenching it in gold, from the stars surrounding the presidential seal on the ceiling to the statues on the fireplace mantel. And it emerged last week that Trump intends to build an enormous $200 million ballroom for hosting official receptions — one of the biggest White House projects in more than a century. Take a look: 'So we'll start in two months maybe, two and a half months, and we'll have it completed in less than two years. It's a very incredible structure — a lot of it's interior work, it's gonna be beautiful, because normally I can build a building like that in four, five months, but it's very intricate, beautiful, beautiful — the best marbles.' And who's paying for this? White House officials say Trump and 'unspecified donors.' If it's a gift, it could raise both ethical and legal questions, potentially violating the Foreign Emoluments Clause of the U.S. Constitution or the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act, which exists to block this type of thing. Democrats are skeptical. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said at a press briefing, 'Listen, I'm happy to eat my cheeseburger at my desk. I don't need a $200 million ballroom to eat it in. OK?' And many Americans feel the same. Sure, White House upgrades might look impressive. And yes, gold gifts make for great photo ops. But while the president is basking in marble and chandeliers, millions of Americans are just trying to make rent, keep groceries on the table and pay off their credit cards. When the person in the highest office is spending and receiving millions frivolously, while the rest of the country is tightening its belt, it's not just bad optics — it's a reminder of exactly how far removed our leaders can be from the lives of the people they represent.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store