Helen Comperatore is furious one year after her husband Corey died at a Trump rally. She says the Secret Service has blood on its hands for failing to stop the assassin. The government’s weak punishment of six agents is a slap in the face to grieving families.
Corey was a hero firefighter who shielded his family from bullets. He died protecting others when a gunman shot at President Trump. This happened because Secret Service agents didn’t guard the roof where the killer hid. They let down America.
The Secret Service admits big failures that day. They say communication broke down and technology didn’t work right. Some agents didn’t do their jobs properly. But their apology means nothing without real accountability.
Six agents got suspended without pay or benefits. That’s not enough for Helen and Corey’s sister Kelly. They ask why no one got fired for this deadly mistake. Kelly says suspended agents are already back working while her family suffers.
“Our blood is all over their hands,” Helen told Fox News. She lost her true love because government workers messed up. She wants to face them and demand answers. Why was the roof unguarded? Why did they fail to protect patriots?
Corey’s sister Kelly is just as angry. “They have my brother’s blood on their hands,” she told CBS News. Letting agents return to work isn’t justice. It shows the government cares more about protecting its own than ordinary Americans.
This is classic government failure. Bureaucrats escape consequences while heroes die. The Secret Service put lives at risk through laziness or incompetence. Real patriots like Corey pay the price for their unforced errors.
The Comperatore family deserves answers and true justice. Coreys sacrifice must never be forgotten. Suspending agents for a few weeks insults his memory. America needs leaders who protect its people, not fail them.