TMJ4 reported that Rode did still own the property the shop was located on. The White House later clarified that Rode also still owns the building, the Associated Press reported.
Gram told TMJ4 that neither Trump nor Rode should have used his destroyed business for a political message.
"I think he needs to bring this country together rather than divide it," Gram said.
Trump again repeated that he deployed the National Guard when it was the Wisconsin governor
During the tour, Rode praised Trump's response to the protests in the city.
"I just appreciate President Trump coming today — everybody here does," Rode said. "We're so thankful we got the federal troops here. Once they got here things did calm down quite a bit."
Trump said: "A day earlier would have saved his store."
Trump added that governors and mayors needed to call for federal help when protests erupted. Last week, after Gov. Tony Evers already deployed the National Guard in Kenosha, Trump said the governor should activate them.
"Governor should call in the National Guard in Wisconsin," Trump tweeted last Tuesday, a day after the Guard was already activated. "It is ready, willing, and more than able. End problem FAST!"
The Guard was activated to mounting protests after Blake, a 29-year-old Black man, was shot seven times by a white police officer last Sunday. Blake is now paralyzed from the waist down.
Evers also wrote a letter to Trump asking him to "reconsider" his decision to visit Kenosha amid the protests and said his presence could hinder the state's healing.
Gram and the White House didn't immediately respond to requests for comment from Business Insider. Contact information for Rode couldn't be located.
Editor's Note: This story has been updated to indicate that John Rode III does still own the building of the business.
- Read more:
- Residents in Kenosha are dismayed at law enforcement's response to the Jacob Blake shooting and protests: 'They just let the fires burn'
- Kenosha residents say the way police handled the 2 shootings this week tell you all you need to know about whether the city is racist
- Activists worry Trump's visit to Kenosha will only 'distract away from the healing' in the aftermath of Jacob Blake shooting and unrest
- Biden accuses Trump of refusing to 'even acknowledge that there's a racial justice problem in America,' while Trump says he won't meet with Jacob Blake's family when he visits Kenosha