Mysterious eye problems during Trump Rally lead to fears of a third assassination attempt

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Various attendees Donald Trump‘s meeting in Arizona has reported that they had mysterious eye problems after the meeting, raising fears of a possible third assassination attempt on the former president, RadarOnline.com can reveal.

On September 12, Trump held a rally in Tucson that drew more than 2,000 people despite the 100-degree heat. The event ended with some Trump supporters going to the emergency room for treatment of bizarre symptoms.

“The Trump campaign has been gathering information,” the Trump campaign said KVOA in a statement noting, “We remain committed to the countless patriots who attend our energetic and impactful rallies across the country.”

The Secret Service told the station that the agency was not aware of anything unusual at the meeting or of any planned threats to Trump in Arizona.

Forty-eight VIP attendees were selected to stand on stage with Trump, and campaign organizers divided them into two groups: one on stage right and one on stage left.

While the group on the left reported no symptoms or anything suspicious, several people in the group on the right left the meeting reportedly feeling excruciating pain in their eyes.

Mayra Rodriguez, a former director of Planned Parenthood and now a Trump supporter, said her eyes burned and she had trouble seeing. Her condition became so bad that she went to the emergency room, where doctors asked if she had been sprayed with something.

Days later, Rodriguez said she is still in pain, telling KVOA, “I can’t see anything. When I try to open my eyes, it’s like a white cloud of cover. It hurts.”

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A brother and sister, who did not want to be named, sat next to Rodriguez during the event. “It just kept getting worse and worse, my eyes were watering a lot, my nose started running and I felt my face getting really red and my neck felt like it was on fire and it just kept going from there,” the nurse told KVOA.

Her brother added: ‘It was all on my eyes, my eyes were so red, you know, it’s unbearable. I couldn’t handle it.”

Kathleen Winn, a former congressional candidate from Arizona’s Congressional District 6, said after the meeting, “We hope there are no nefarious actors involved and that this is not a strategic hit.”

The Harris campaign took place in Tucson on the same day as Trump’s rally Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff, hosted a private event in downtown Tucson.

Arizona has become a major election battleground, with eleven critical Electoral College votes.

A Data Orbital survey found that the candidates were neck-and-neck at 46 percent. However, the average of all recent polls in Arizona gives Trump a lead of 0.8 percent.

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