A man was led away by security personnel after Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump was rushed offstage at a rally on Nov. 5 in Reno, Nev. (Peter Stevenson/The Washington Post)

A man was led away by security personnel after Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump was rushed offstage at a rally on Nov. 5 in Reno, Nev. (Peter Stevenson/The Washington Post)

Donald Trump was rushed off stage Saturday night during a campaign rally here as security officials swarmed, but the candidate emerged back on stage after a few minutes and finished his speech.

The U.S. Secret Service later said in a statement that it took action after “an unidentified individual shouted ‘gun’” in front of the stage. Agents apprehended the person, but found no gun, the statement said, adding that an investigation into the incident continues.

The man, who identified himself as Austyn Crites, 33, was released shortly after the incident, according to reports. He said he was holding a “Republicans against Trump” sign.

“When I pulled out the sign, people around me were trying to grab the sign,” Crites told reporters, according to reports on the local Fox and NBC affiliate websites. “And so all that was occurring was booing, of course. That’s what you would expect.”

People from the surrounding crowd tackled him, Crites said. They started “kicking me and grabbing me in the crotch and just, just beating the crap out of me,” Crites said.

Trump concluded his rally without further incident.

The GOP presidential nominee later released a statement thanking the Secret Service and local law enforcement for their “fast and professional response,” adding that “nothing will stop us — we will make America great again!”

Meanwhile, a press bus carrying reporters covering Democratic vice-presidential nominee Sen Tim Kaine’s stops in Florida was hit at high speed, according to reporters traveling with the senator. There were no immediate reports of injuries. Kaine was several cars ahead of the press bus, according to reporters in his motorcade.

Earlier in the day, Hillary Clinton’s campaign announced she will campaign in Michigan on Monday, as polls show her once-comfortable lead in the state eroding and as Trump eyes it as a potential way to come from behind in the hunt for electoral votes.

That announcement from the Clinton campaign came as Trump also rejiggered his itinerary, making plans for last-minute stops in Virginia, where Clinton has led but Republicans are catching up.

The GOP nominee spent Saturday hopscotching the country, rallying with supporters in North Carolina, as well as Florida, Colorado and Nevada — and he announced plans to visit Minnesota, a traditionally Democratic state where polls showing him trailing by about five points. In his speech in Nevada late Saturday, Trump attacked elections officials for allowing a predominantly Hispanic early voting site in the Las Vegas area to stay open for “hours and hours.”

President Obama will also campaign in Michigan on Monday, suggesting that Democrats see danger signs there. Clinton will be in Grand Rapids, Obama in Ann Arbor. Former president Bill Clinton will make a stop in Lansing on Sunday.

[Clinton maintains narrow four-point edge, pushing past concerns about honesty]

“There are just three days left in this most consequential election,” Clinton told a cheering crowd of about 10,000 an open-air rally and concert in Philadelphia on Saturday night.

Clinton noted the millions of people of have voted early and urged Pennsylvania voters to help “send a message” about American values and ideals.

“I believe they are standing up for a hopeful, inclusive vision of America and I’m asking you to stand up for that same vision,” Clinton said.

Over the last two weeks much of Clinton’s focus has been on Florida and North Carolina, as well as Nevada, where early voting is now winding down.

But her campaign manager Robby Mook, conceded to reporters on Saturday that “we have seen tightening in the Midwest generally this cycle, and we are taking that seriously.”

Clinton communications director Jennifer Palmieri told reporters Saturday that in addition to a previously announced stop in Manchester, N.H., on Sunday night, Clinton will add a rally in Cleveland earlier Sunday. On Monday in addition to Michigan, Clinton will add a midnight rally in Raleigh, N.C. Another large evening rally had also been announced for Philadelphia that night.

Palmieri said that Khizr Khan will speak at the New Hampshire rally. Khan is the father of fallen soldier Humayun Khan, whose challenge to Trump over the Republican’s proposed ban on Muslim immigration was among the most memorable moments of the Democratic convention.

Trump’s focus on Saturday night was Nevada, where polls show the race tied.

Campaigning in Reno, Trump denounced a decision by elections officials to keep open an early voting site “for hours and hours.”

Early voting totals in Clark County, Nev., which encompasses Las Vegas, topped 57,000, according to local officials. A supermarket doubling as an early-voting site in the county was allowed to stay open for two additional hours on Friday night as thousands of people remained in line to vote. It is customary for state elections officials across the country to authorize keeping a polling site open later if there are long lines at closing time.

Regardless, Trump claimed that officials allowed Clinton supporters to “bus and bring Democratic voters in. Folks, it’s a rigged system. It’s a rigged system and we’re going to beat it. We’re going to beat it. I’ve been saying it’s a rigged system.”

[An early sign Trump is being out-organized: A big Democratic advantage in Nevada voting]

Trump continued his emphasis on Clinton’s emails controversy throughout the day Saturday, citing the FBI’s announcement last week that it would revive an inquiry into her use of a private email server at the State Department. In Reno, he said that if Clinton were elected, her presidency would lead to “an unprecedented constitutional crisis.”

“We could very well have a sitting president under felony indictment and ultimately a criminal trial. It would grind government to a halt, of course that’s what we have right now under Obama anyway,” he told the crowd in Reno. “We need a government that can work, and work well from day one for the American people. That would be impossible with Hillary Clinton, the prime suspect in a far-reaching criminal investigation.”

In the aftermath of the event’s disruption, when security officers removed Trump from the stage and later said they found no weapon, Trump campaign aides and the candidate’s son, Donald Trump Jr., retweeted a supporter who credited Trump for returning to the stage after an “assassination attempt” and noted that Clinton had cut an event short earlier Saturday in Florida because of rain.

Trump, Pence and key campaign surrogates also will swing through Virginia this weekend and into Monday. Trump will hold a 10 p.m. rally Sunday at a fairgrounds in the Northern Virginia swing territory of Loudoun County, his campaign announced on Saturday. Pence was scheduled to appear at a suburban Richmond Saturday afternoon and at a rally at George Mason University at 8 p.m. Saturday. Two of Trump’s children — Donald Trump Jr. and Ivanka Trump — are planning stops in Northern Virginia on Sunday and Monday, respectively.

In the closing days of the campaign, polling averages compiled by The Washington Post continue to show a close contest in several battleground states. In Michigan, Clinton now holds just a two-point edge over Trump, 43 to 41 percent. She also holds a slim lead in New Hampshire (43-41), which accounts for the renewed attention there in the closing days.

In Colorado, Clinton is up 43 percent to 41 percent. In Arizona, Trump leads by three points (46-43). Clinton is ahead by six points in New Mexico (40-34) and five points in North Carolina (48-43), Pennsylvania (47-42) and Wisconsin (45-40). She’s up by four points in Virginia (45-41).

Trump holds a five-point lead in Ohio (46-41), where Clinton held a star-studded campaign rally on Friday night with rapper Jay-Z and Beyoncé, his wife.

The race remains tick-tock tight in Nevada, where the candidates are tied at 44 percent each. In Florida, Clinton has a one-point, 47 to 46 percent advantage. Trump leads in Georgia (47-45); Iowa (46-41); and Utah (35-28) where third-party candidate Evan McMullin has been polling well.

Poll averages calculated by The Washington Post for Clinton and Trump reflect recent polls that also include McMullin, Libertarian Gary Johnson and Green Party candidate Jill Stein where they are on the ballot and where results are available.

As the race enters its final stretch, the Clinton campaign continues to push back aggressively against the FBI’s decision to revive the inquiry into Clinton’s email.

Campaigning in Florida on Saturday, Kaine (D-Va.), the Democratic vice-presidential candidate, sharply criticized the FBI and its director, James Comey, for the development.

In an interview with the Fusion television network, Kaine faulted Comey for breaking agency protocol by discussing a politically sensitive case so close to an election.

Comey’s decision to alert Congress about his review of the Clinton case “suggests that it’s probably more likely explained that [Comey] knew that the FBI is not only a leaky sieve but there were people within the FBI actively working — actively working — to try to help the Trump campaign,” Kaine said. “This just absolutely staggering, and it is a massive blow to the integrity of [the FBI].”

John Wagner, Katie Zezima, Robert Barnes, Sarah Parnass and Sean Sullivan in Washington and Laura Vozzella in Richmond contributed to this report. Gearan reported from Philadelphia and O’Keefe from Washington.