Alleged Trump gunman Ryan Wesley Routh busted with bomb during 2002 police standoff

GREENSBORO, North Carolina — The alleged gunman who authorities say tried to kill former President Donald Trump was arrested with a bomb — a “weapon of mass destruction” — following a tense police standoff in 2002, according to authorities.

It’s just one incident in a long history of dangerous and unsettling behavior recounted by cops and neighbors in his hometown.

Ryan Wesley Routh, 58, was charged with possessing a weapon of mass destruction after Greensboro, North Carolina, police arrested him during a traffic stop that escalated dramatically when he barricaded himself in the office of his roofing business.

Would-be Trump assassin Ryan Routh was arrested with a bomb in 2002. Martin County Sheriff’s Office

Law enforcement officials at the crime scene where Routh was positioned on the edge of Trump’s West Palm Beach golf course. AFP via Getty Images

Tracy Fulk, the now-retired Greensboro cop who arrested Routh back then, told The Post the man was on cops’ radar when she spotted him driving with a revoked license and pulled him over.

“When I got just about to the driver’s door, I saw him reach into the center of the car — so of course I shined my flashlight and looked and he opened a duffel back and there was a gun in it,” Fulk recalled.

“He never picked it up. He just kind of held his hand over the duffel bag, so I backed up and I issued commands, and he just decided to put it in drive and he drove,” she added.

Routh, who drove to his offices and barricaded himself from police, was also in possession of a binary explosive fitted with a 10-inch detonation cord and a blasting cap — the components of an explosive device, according to Greensboro police.

Routh was arrested with the “weapon of mass destruction” after a tense police standoff. AFPTV/AFP via Getty Images

Fulk in police custody after Secret Service foiled the assassination plot against Trump. MARTIN COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE/AFP via Getty Images

Fulk said she was wary of the man, so she called for backup while taking cover behind her vehicle.

“I think we were out there a couple hours, but it seemed like forever,” the former officer said. “I could see him inside pacing back and forth and every once in a while he would look out the window.

“But he never pointed a gun at anybody that night,” she added. “Once they got him to surrender, that was it.” 

Fulk said she was shocked to learn that the man she encountered all those years ago was the same man accused of attempting to shoot Trump on Sunday while he was playing golf in his Florida course.

Tracy Fulk, the now-retired Greensboro cop who arrested Routh, said that he was armed with a gun and barricaded himself in his office. LP Media

Routh’s mugshot from Feb. 10, 2010. Guilford County Sheriffâs Office via AP

Although the former cop described Routh as “polite” during his arrest, she said the charges he faces now make a certain amount of sense.

“At first I was surprised but then, after I started remembering all the barometer reports and the incidents that other officers had with him,” she said, “I guess it’s kind of along his personality.”  

Here’s what we know about the assassination attempt on Trump in Florida:

News photographers have used the gaps in foliage at Trump’s West Palm Beach golf club to take pictures of him — a security gap gunman Ryan Routh exploited.

Fulk’s comment came after one of Routh’s neighbors, Josh Patrick, 30, told The Post of the multiple, unsettling run-ins he had with Routh back in March.

Patrick described Routh as a “high-risk person,” claiming “there were warning signs” and “red flags” that he would eventually attack someone.

Routh’s neighbor in Greensboro Josh Patrick told The Post that there were “red flags” and “warning signs” that he would attack somebody eventually. LP Media

Secret Service and Homeland Security agents raiding Routh’s Grensboro house on Sept. 15, 2024. REUTERS/Jonathan Drake

David Atkinson, a former employee who worked at Routh’s United Roofing company, said he too was surprised by Sunday’s arrest since he knew his former boss as a good, family man.

“For Ryan to do something to this, something triggered him or he was provoked, because I’m telling you personally, from my experience – and know a lot of people who have worked for the same man, and they would tell you the same thing – that Ryan Routh is not like this,” said Atkinson, a registered sex offender.


Follow the latest on the foiled assassination attempt on Donald Trump in Florida:


The ex-employee, however, conceded that Routh was always vocal about his opinions and that “he’s not scared of nobody.”

Routh in Florida federal court for his arraignment on Sept. 16, 2024. REUTERS/Lothar Speer

Routh was hit with federal gun charges. REUTERS/Lothar Speer

Atkinson echoed words from another former employee, Tina Cooper, 58, who said her ex-boss had a knack for doing “stupid s—,” as she recalled the 2002 standoff.

“He had a standoff here, and I don’t know what he was thinking then, either,” Cooper told the UK outlet. “All I know is that I got woken up one morning with the news that he had got arrested and the guys needed work orders, so I went and got the work orders.

“[Routh] had threatened to blow up the entire Greensboro Police Department, that was all documented in the police reports,” she added.

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