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The FBI rejected Tucker Carlson’s claim it hid Thomas Crooks’ online activity

The clash between Tucker Carlson and the FBI is less about one gunman’s online habits than about who gets to define reality after a national trauma. Carlson frames himself as exposing a cover-up: a young shooter with a “robust online presence,” training with targets in his room, allegedly ignored or concealed by federal authorities. The FBI counters that this story rests on a distortion—that it never claimed Crooks had “no online footprint,” and that critics are retrofitting assumptions into official statements that don’t exist.

In the space between those claims sits a shaken public, still missing key answers about motive, missed warnings, and institutional failure. The attempted assassination of Donald Trump already shattered confidence in security protections; the resignation of the Secret Service director confirmed that something fundamental broke. Now, every withheld file, every disputed quote, and every viral video feeds a deeper suspicion: that the full story is still being managed, not told.