Former US President Donald Trump has agreed to be questioned by the FBI as part of the investigation into the assassination attempt on him at a rally in Pennsylvania earlier this month.
The FBI has not yet released details on when the interview will take place or the specific reasons for which Trump will be questioned.
Meanwhile, during a phone call with journalists, the BBC has announced that the FBI office has said that Trump will only be questioned in the context of an "objective", as they do in any other similar case.
"We want to know his perspective, what he saw," said Kevin Rojek, an FBI special agent.
Despite the hints, investigators have not yet come to a specific conclusion about the motives that may have led 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks to open fire on Donald Trump on July 13.
The FBI also said investigators believe Crook had done careful planning before the assassination.
Also, according to recently published messages, it is said that the 20-year-old was seen about 90 minutes before he committed the attack. The assassination of Trump was described as a failure for the US Secret Service, whose director resigned a few days after the assassination.