America's Next Top Model alum Adrianne Curry said she does not believe information from federal agencies about the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump.

Thomas Matthew Crooks was identified as the gunman who fired shots at Trump from a rooftop as the former president spoke at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on Saturday. Spectator Corey Comperatore, a former volunteer fire chief from Pennsylvania, was killed, and two others were seriously injured, while Trump was shot in his right ear. The Secret Service fatally shot 20-year-old Crooks.

Curry shared her conspiracy that Crooks was an alleged plant by the "Deep State" or Trump's opponents rather than a criminal who acted alone and whose motivations for the shooting are still being investigated.

The model, who now goes by Curry-Rhode since marrying voice actor Matthew Rhode in 2018, took to her Rumble video account to share her thoughts on the events that shocked the world.

In a video entitled "Peaceful Protester Endangers Trump," Curry first slammed the media's coverage of the assassination attempt before turning her sights on federal agencies.

"I don't believe anything they say about anything. I don't believe the FDA (Food and Drug Administration), I don't believe the CIA, I don't believe the FBI," she began, referring to the FDA's COVID safety protocols, of which she has long been a critic.

"I don't believe the NRA (National Rifle Association). I don't believe any of them."

Curry continued: "I don't believe anything they're saying about the shooter. I don't believe any of the information that's out on them. And I certainly don't believe he was a mastermind, and he pulled a fast one on the Secret Service."

Adrianne Curry at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood, California, on April 30, 2015. Curry shared a conspiracy theory about the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump. Adrianne Curry at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood, California, on April 30, 2015. Curry shared a conspiracy theory about the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump. Imeh Akpanudosen/Getty Images

She then questioned how Crook could have "snuck past the elite Secret Service" to shoot at the former president.

"It was allowed to happen," Curry theorized. "You can't tell me [there were] two minutes of Trump supporters going, 'There's a guy with a gun. He's going to kill the president, help.'"

Curry claimed people were trying to warn the Secret Service, but the agents were "letting it happen," referring to the shooting.

"We're helping the Deep State, like, come on. So, I'm done."

Curry said she could not believe "a kid outsmarted the Secret Service" and slammed female Secret Service officers as not being strong or big enough to protect Trump.

She also said that using female Secret Service agents was an alleged way to aid the assassination attempt.

"They kept him on the stage, watch how quickly they ushered Reagan away and watch what they did with Trump," Curry said.

Former President Ronald Reagan survived an assassination attempt in 1981 when John Hinckley Jr. shot him in Washington, D.C. The Secret Service quickly threw him into the car for protection.

Newsweek reached out to the Secret Service via email for comment.

Following the assassination attempt on Trump, the Secret Service released a statement saying it was working with "Federal, state and local agencies to understand what happened, how it happened, and how we can prevent an incident like this from ever taking place again."

The agency also said that it had "reviewed and strengthened" its security plan for this week's Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in the wake of Saturday's shooting.

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