Firefighter Corey Comperatore wasn’t supposed to have front-row seats at Trump rally, pal reveals at hero’s wake
FREEPORT, Pa. — The firefighter who was killed while shielding his family from a sniper’s bullets at former President Donald Trump’s campaign rally wasn’t even supposed to be sitting in the seat that put him in the line of fire, a grieving pal said.
Corey Comperatore, 50, moved to the front-row seat just moments before the presidential hopeful was slated to speak — and before a deranged gunman launched an attack that rocked the nation.
“So talk about a freak, freak accident. That he wasn’t even supposed to be sitting there and he ends up losing his life,” Scott Dockherty, CEO of manufacturing company CID Associates, where Comperatore’s brother worked, said Thursday.
Dockherty revealed the tragic twist outside Comperatore’s wake at Laube Hall in Freeport, where hundreds of mourners paid their respects.
Comperatore rushed to throw his wife and two daughters to the ground as Thomas Matthew Crooks squeezed off bullets, his heartbroken widow, Helen, previously told The Post.
