Secret Service Director ‘Confident’ in RNC Security Plan

 The US Secret Service said on Monday it would participate fully in probes announced by President Joe Biden and members of Congress - (The AP)
 The US Secret Service said on Monday it would participate fully in probes announced by President Joe Biden and members of Congress - (The AP)
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Secret Service Director ‘Confident’ in RNC Security Plan

 The US Secret Service said on Monday it would participate fully in probes announced by President Joe Biden and members of Congress - (The AP)
 The US Secret Service said on Monday it would participate fully in probes announced by President Joe Biden and members of Congress - (The AP)

The US Secret Service said on Monday it would participate fully in probes announced by President Joe Biden and members of Congress, after its agents failed to prevent a gunman from shooting and injuring former President Donald Trump over the weekend.

The FBI says it is investigating the incident on Saturday at a Trump rally in Pennsylvania as an assassination attempt. Biden said on Sunday he had ordered an independent review, and Republican lawmakers vowed swift investigations.

In her first major statement since the shooting, which killed a rally attendee, Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle said the agency was increasing security for Republican presidential candidate Trump and the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, which kicks off on Monday.

"I am confident in the security plan our Secret Service RNC coordinator and our partners have put in place, which we have reviewed and strengthened in the wake of Saturday's shooting," Cheatle said in a statement, Reuters reported.

She said the agency has implemented changes to Trump's security detail since Saturday to ensure his protection during the convention and the remainder of the campaign.

Trump said a bullet grazed his ear during the Saturday rally but that he is doing fine. He traveled to Milwaukee on Sunday and is expected to receive his party's formal nomination later this week.



Attacker Stabs and Wounds French Soldier Patrolling Paris Ahead of 2024 Olympics

A person takes a picture with the Olympic Games logo at the Bastille square in Paris, France, 15 July 2024. (EPA)
A person takes a picture with the Olympic Games logo at the Bastille square in Paris, France, 15 July 2024. (EPA)
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Attacker Stabs and Wounds French Soldier Patrolling Paris Ahead of 2024 Olympics

A person takes a picture with the Olympic Games logo at the Bastille square in Paris, France, 15 July 2024. (EPA)
A person takes a picture with the Olympic Games logo at the Bastille square in Paris, France, 15 July 2024. (EPA)

A French soldier was stabbed outside a big train station in Paris on Monday and the attacker was arrested, officials said, while the city is under a high security alert 11 days before the opening ceremony of the 2024 Olympics.

The soldier was hospitalized with a shoulder blade injury, but was not in life-threatening condition, and the motive for the attack was under investigation, the Paris prosecutor's office said.

An investigation was opened into attempted murder, and the suspect's identity was being confirmed, the prosecutor's office said. Authorities did not suspect terrorism as a motive at this stage, according to the national counterterrorism prosecutor's office.

The soldier was among thousands of troops serving in the Sentinelle force for France’s domestic security, created to guard prominent French sites after a string of deadly extremist attacks in 2015. Soldiers in the Sentinelle force have been targeted in the past.

Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin posted on X that the soldier was patrolling at the Gare de l’Est train station in eastern Paris, and that the assailant was detained.

Paris is deploying around 30,000 police officers each day for the Olympics, which run from July 26 to Aug. 11, with a peak of 45,000 for the opening ceremony on the Seine river.

About 18,000 members of the military are also helping ensure security, including thousands housed in a huge, special camp erected on the edge of Paris.