Sean Curran, hero of Donald Trump assassination bid, named US Secret Service director
Sean Curran, the head of Donald Trump's personal security detail, helped Trump survive a failed assassination attempt in Pennsylvania.
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday nominated Sean Curran, the head of his security detail, as the director of the Secret Service, reported news agency AFP. Curran was one of the Secret Service agents who helped protect Trump during a failed assassination bid at an election rally in Pennsylvania last year.

He was identified as the agent to Trump's right in pictures of the President raising his fist defiantly after he was shot in the ear by a gunman in Butler, Pennsylvania.
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"Sean is a Great Patriot, who has protected my family over the past few years, and that is why I trust him to lead the Brave Men and Women of the United States Secret Service," Trump posted on Truth Social.
Trump added, “He proved his fearless courage when he risked his own life to help save mine from an assassin's bullet in Butler, Pennsylvania. have complete and total confidence in Sean to make the United States Secret Service stronger than ever before.”
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Curran has a career spanning 23 years in the Secret Service, starting as a special agent in their Newark field office. Curran became the head of the Presidential Protective Division during President Trump's first term in office.
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Sean Curran's nomination comes after a bipartisan panel recommended that the agency needed leadership with “significant experience outside the Secret Service.”
Panel on assassination attempt
A four-member independent panel presented a 52-page report to homeland security secretary Alejandro Mayorkas calling for reform in the Secret Service and stating that the agency needed reforms post their "historic" failure to prevent the assassination attempt in Pennsylvania.
“The Secret Service has become bureaucratic, complacent, and static,” the report said, adding that fundamental reform was required for the agency to carry out its mission.
The report also noted that without reforms, assassination attempts such as the one in Pennsylvania "can and will happen again."
