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Former President Trump on Monday announced his plans to return to Butler, Pennsylvania – where a gunman tried to assassinate him at a campaign rally on July 13 – in October, though he didn’t give an exact date.
The announcement came during the former president’s hour-long conversation with SpaceX CEO Elon Musk on X, formerly Twitter, that garnered about a billion viewers in total, Musk said in a follow-up post early Tuesday morning.
“By the way, we’re going back to Butler, and we’re going to go back in October,” Trump said during the conversation over X’s “Spaces” feature, which allows users to listen to audio conversations in real-time.
Butler is a “great area,” Trump said, adding that he has been in touch with the families of Corey Comperatore, the 50-year-old husband, father and retired volunteer fire chief who was fatally shot during the assassination attempt; David Dutch, the 57-year-old Marine veteran critically wounded; and James Copenhaver, the 74-year-old father who was also critically wounded.
TRUMP SHOOTING: TIMELINE OF ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT
Former President Trump is rushed offstage after shots were fired during a rally on July 13, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
The former president credited a change in plans – specifically, when he asked his campaign to project a chart showing immigration statistics on a large screen to the right of his podium – as the reason he walked away from the rally alive, with only a nicked ear.
“It’s very much… an act of God. It’s a miracle. I’m honored by it.”
“The bigger miracle was that I was looking in the exact direction of the shooter. And so it hit me at an angle that was far less destructive than any other angle,” Trump told Musk. “So that was the miracle.… For those people that don’t believe in God – I think we gotta all start thinking about that.”
Republican candidate Donald Trump, seen with blood on his face, is surrounded by Secret Service agents as he is taken off the stage in Butler, Pennsylvania, July 13, 2024. (Rebecca Droke/AFP via Getty Images)
Trump also credited various first responders for their help during and after the shooting, from local police to U.S. Secret Service officials to doctors in the Butler area.
“[T]he Secret Service sniper – they call him or sharpshooter, but sniper… he didn’t know there was a problem. He’s an extraordinary shot, obviously. And he didn’t know there was a problem. And he was able to pick it all out within five seconds,” Trump said. “He used one bullet from very far away… probably about 400 yards… and he saw the smoke and the flame from the gun. He immediately recognized it and immediately took a shot.”
FUMING POLICE OFFICER SAYS HE TOLD SECRET SERVICE TO SECURE TRUMP SHOOTER BUILDING DAYS BEFORE RALLY: BODYCAM
A graphic representation of the position of the sniper team in relation to the would-be assassin at the Trump rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13, 2024. (Fox News)
He also credited the USSS officers who jumped on top of him when he heard the first bullets fly by his head.
“They moved so fast,” he said of the agents. “And let me tell you, that took tremendous courage.”
TRUMP ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT: PENNSYLVANIA POLICE RELEASE BODYCAM FROM DEADLY BUTLER RALLY
Trump then praised a Butler police officer who climbed up onto the roof of the AGR building, where shooter Thomas Crooks was hiding, just seconds before Crooks opened fire. Trump said if it weren’t for that distraction, he may not be alive today.
WATCH: BODYCAM VIDEO SHOWS OFFICER HOISTED UP TO ROOF
“[The officer] saw the man with the gun, the man with a gun pointed the gun at him, he thought he was probably going to get shot. But he was, like, pulling himself up, and because of that, he couldn’t get to his gun. And he fell down, actually very badly hurt.… But he fell down and he did, from what I understand, he did say there’s a guy up there with a gun. And the shooting started very quickly after that.”
The local officer “did what he was supposed to do,” Trump added later on.
TRUMP SHOOTING TASK FORCE DEMANDS DOCUMENTS FROM TOP BIDEN OFFICIALS IN PROBE KICKOFF
The Butler Farm Show, site of a campaign rally on July 15, 2024, in Butler, Pennsylvania. Former President Trump was wounded on July 13 during an assassination attempt at the rally. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)
Trump thinks the encounter between the local officer, who has not been publicly named, and Crooks made Crooks act “quicker,” potentially impacting his aim at the former president.
“For those people that don’t believe in God – I think we gotta all start thinking about that.”
The former president also said the assassination attempt will be a learning experience for law enforcement: “They’re going to learn from this,” he told Musk when the Tesla CEO asked about the former president’s thoughts on how officials missed a gunman on the roof of a nearby building that was unmanned at the time of the rally, despite people in the crowd pointing him out.
Pictures of Thomas Mathew Crooks taken by a sniper. (Sen. Ron Johnson’s Office)
“There was a mistake. If somebody knew, because… there was just a bad feeling that there was somebody around,” Trump said.
Additionally, Trump gave a shout-out to doctors who treated him and the other victims, saying they “were really incredible.”
“It was a very terrible experience. The Butler hospital, they did such a great job, the doctors were so good,” the former president said.
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Food News
A beloved New England chain restaurant’s last Boston location may close as developers eye the lot around it for future apartments at Charlestown’s Bunker Hill Mall.
Universal Hub first reported the news that the 99 Restaurant on Austin Street could shutter as part of a proposal to replace much of the site with a six-story, 240-unit apartment complex.
A spokesperson for the restaurant said the 99 has been at its 31 Austin St. location for 33 years.
“We are aware that the owners of Bunker Hill Mall property are considering a redevelopment of the entire site, and as such, we are exploring our options to remain in this community far into the future,” a spokesperson said. “We will continue to serve our loyal guests in our current location as long as our lease remains in place.”
The property owner, New England Development, originally proposed a plan in 2021 that would build apartments around the 99 in a U-shape design, according to previous documents and members of the Charlestown Neighborhood Council who spoke to Boston.com. But the neighborhood council development chair Nancy Johnson said the community had a hard time envisioning that design.
Since then, a key zoning change has reshaped the project. In late 2023, the Boston Planning Department changed the Bunker Hill Mall site’s zoning from neighborhood shopping to mixed-use, clearing the way for residential builds. New England Development now proposes replacing the 99 entirely, with construction to be finished by 2028.
In a statement, New England Development said the restaurant “will remain in operation through at least the end of 2026.”
“The residential development, which adheres to zoning, will provide needed housing, and also complement and support the existing grocery and commercial uses with no reduction in parking for those businesses,” the statement read.
In a March meeting, some public comments opposed the project because of the likely shuttering of the 99.
“The 99 is one of the few family-friendly restaurants in Charlestown,” said one commenter. “We have celebrated numerous end-of-season sports events there. We need these kind of community spaces in Charlestown.”
Residents also raised broader concerns about the development, including parking and the potential loss of retail in addition to the 99. It isn’t immediately clear which stores will stay. A draft project impact report filed this year indicates redevelopment would only be considered after the “expiration of long-term retail leases.”
But along with zoning changes, Boston’s planning department approved a modification to the urban renewal plan to allow for the residential build. Johnson said the community is worried it could mean less retail stores at the site, which is the opposite of what the community wants.
The Bunker Hill Mall currently includes a Whole Foods, CVS, an Ace Hardware, and other stores. The 99 and a Dunkin’ are the last remaining restaurant spaces on site — the 99 being the last full-service option. The mall previously housed a Papa Gino’s and a Friendly’s.
The Charlestown Neighborhood Council expressed frustration mostly with the Boston Planning & Development Agency over the lack of a community process during the 2023 zoning change and a subsequent update to the site’s urban renewal plan.
“We want our neighbors and other residents to have good, affordable housing that’s safe and well-made,” Johnson said. “But you have to plan for the future, and a neighborhood is going to need retail spaces.”
The 99’s long history in Charlestown includes a 1995 shooting that killed four people. More recently, the chain has maintained a loyal following: It topped a Boston.com reader poll in 2020 and drew a wave of praise from readers in 2024 reacting to a Reddit post declaring the chain was underrated.
If the Charlestown location ultimately closes at the Bunker Hill Mall site, the closest 99 locations to Boston proper would be in Revere and Quincy.
Stay up to date on the latest food and drink news from Boston.com.
A judge Tuesday sentenced the last of three defendants in the fatal 2024 stabbing of a mentally ill man at an abandoned Pittsburgh house.
Carlena Wells, 20, was sentenced to 2½ to 5 years in prison on a conspiracy to commit aggravated assault charge in the March 2024 death of Marc Kovach, 37.
Police said Kovach, who was schizophrenic, was beaten and stabbed, then his corpse was hidden under the porch of an empty West End house.
Attorney Thomas N. Farrell, who represented Wells, said his client is autistic. He asked Allegheny County Common Pleas Judge Simquita R. Bridges to help rehabilitate Wells by sending her to a group home with around-the-clock care.
Prosecutors pushed back.
“Her role was admittedly less than anybody else’s but that doesn’t change the fact that a family is left without a son,” Allegheny County Assistant District Attorney John Fitzgerald said.
While Bridges opted for incarceration, the victim’s older sister said the three people involved in the killing did not face adequate justice.
“Even if she did not kill my brother, she stood there and watched and did nothing,” Misty Kovach, 46, of Port Vue, said while speaking during the sentencing. She criticized the defendants’ sentences.
Dominic Johnson, now 21, Wells’ boyfriend at the time of the attack, negotiated a guilty plea in April 2025 to third-degree murder and conspiracy, according to police and court records. Bridges sentenced him to 13 to 26 years in prison.
Just three months later, Logan Smetanka, also now 21, negotiated a guilty plea on conspiracy to commit third-degree murder, court records show. Bridges sentenced him to 4 to 8 years in prison.
Attorneys for both men declined comment Tuesday.
Police initially said the crime unfolded on March 16, 2024, when Johnson was hanging out with Kovach in a home on Steuben Street. Johnson attacked Kovach for touching Wells, according to a criminal complaint.
At least two witnesses whom police did not identify in court records told authorities they were present during the attack.
One witness told police that Johnson and Wells were “stomping” on Kovach at the house, the complaint said. Investigators said they were told by a witness that Johnson and Smetanka knocked Kovach unconscious. Johnson then dragged an unconscious Kovach toward the porch of the house, according to the complaint.
Pittsburgh police were dispatched to Steuben Street five days after the crime when someone called 911 to report a body. Responding officers found Kovach dead in a dried pool of blood under the front porch of the home, the complaint said.
He had been stabbed multiple times in the abdomen. Kovach was lying face-up on the ground, with a black jacket covering his chest.
Misty Kovach told TribLive Tuesday that her younger brother was diagnosed with schizophrenia after he started growing increasingly paranoid while studying at Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
Smoking marijuana appeared to exacerbate his mental health issues, she said. Marc Kovach, one of three children, was involuntarily committed to a hospital for mental health treatment at least once, his sister said.
Misty Kovach said she helped her brother get an apartment in Glassport. The family, however, did not know where he was living at the time of his death.
Farrell, Wells’ attorney, told the judge his client “had a rough life, a very difficult life.”
Wells herself briefly apologized to Kovach’s family.
“I just want to say I do feel remorseful for what I’ve done,” Wells said. “I’m just sorry.”
“My brother was mentally ill and we really didn’t figure that out until a couple years ago,” Misty Kovach said on the witness stand. “He also had a rough life. But he did not hurt people. That’s not an excuse.”
HOLYOKE, Mass. (WGGB/WSHM) — A 24-year-old man has been convicted of first-degree murder in connection to the deadly shooting of Elis Vizcarrondo back in 2022, according to Hampden District Attorney Anthony D. Gulluni.
On July 3rd, 2022, officers arrived to the scene at the Connecticut River, finding Vizcarrondo’s body after he had been shot in the back of the head and through his right eye.
During the investigation, officials received information from witnesses that led them to 131 Clemente Street in Holyoke, where it was confirmed, the victim was killed. Officials were also able to find out there were multiple others involved.
One of the others, William Bell, was charged, but had already passed away in April 2025, while in custody at the Berkshire County Jail and House of Correction. Officials say Miguel Morales was also later charged, as an accessory after the fact.
During the trial of 24-year-old Elijah Melendez of Holyoke, it came out that Melendez had admitted to multiple people that he worked alongside Bell to kill Vizcarrondo, due to their connection with a separate homicide investigation.
Melendez was found guilty by a jury of first-degree murder, possession of a firearm without a license, and possession of ammunition without a license. His sentencing is scheduled for Friday, May 1st, in Hampden Superior Court.
The investigation was conducted through a coordinated effort between the Massachusetts State Police Detective Unit assigned to the Hampden District Attorney’s Office, along with the Holyoke Police Department and the Chicopee Police Department.
Copyright 2026 Western Mass News (WGGB/WSHM). All rights reserved.
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