Former Secret Service Chief Demanded WH Destroy Drug Evidence

Bombshell Report About Secret Service

A bombshell report has revealed that disgraced former Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle pushed for the Secret Service to destroy evidence after the infamous incident where a bag of cocaine was discovered in the White House.

On July 2, 2023 a Secret Service agent found a bag of cocaine in the White House and “told his supervisors, including Cheatle and Acting Secret Service Director Ron Rowe, who was deputy director at the time, that he wanted to follow a certain crime-scene investigative protocol, he was taken off the case,” according to the report from Real Clear Politics.

The Secret Service ultimately concluded its investigation on July 12, claiming that they could not identify the culprit.

A statement from the agency read: “There was no surveillance video footage found that provided investigative leads or any other means for investigators to identify who may have deposited the found substance in this area. Without physical evidence, the investigation will not be able to single out a person of interest from the hundreds of individuals who passed through the vestibule where the cocaine was discovered. At this time, the Secret Service’s investigation is closed due to a lack of physical evidence.”

However, it was clear to many Americans that the culprit would have to be a member of the Biden family — questioning who could have entered that part of the White House without being searched, as almost everyone who enters the White House is extensively searched. Coincidentally, President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden, who has a history of drug addiction, was staying at the White House just before the cocaine was found, according to “three sources in the Secret Service community” who spoke with Real Clear Politics.

Cheatle, who was appointed as Secret Service director in 2022 partly because of her close relationship with first lady Jill Biden, was reportedly pushing for the coverup.

“When the cocaine was first discovered, Cheatle apparently knew it would spark a media firestorm,” Real Clear Politics reported. “The incident prompted viral memes about Hunter Biden’s addictions and accusations from Republican political figures, including Nikki Haley, that the Secret Service knew whose cocaine it was and was trying to cover it up.”

“Secret Service leaders, under pressure from Cheatle and other top agency officials, chose not to run additional searches for DNA matches or conduct interviews with the hundreds of people who work in the White House complex,” the outlet later added.

A source who spoke with Real Clear Politics explained: “That’s because they didn’t want to know, or even narrow down the field of who it could be. It could have been Hunter Biden, it could have been a staffer, it could have been someone doing a tour – we’ll never know.”

The outlet went on to explain that it is “unclear exactly when Cheatle and other top officials tried to persuade the Forensics Services Division to destroy the evidence” — however, Matt White, who supervised the vault holding the cocaine evidence, at some point “received a call from Cheatle or someone speaking on her behalf asking him to destroy the bag of cocaine because agency leaders wanted to close the case, according to two sources in the Secret Service community.”

“A decision was made not to get rid of the evidence, and it really pissed off Cheatle,” a source in the Secret Service community told the outlet.

The report went on to allege retaliation against then-acting Uniformed Division chief Richard Macauley, noting that he was passed over for the permanent position “in what many in the agency view as an act of retaliation for supporting those who refused to dispose of the cocaine,” according to several Secret Service sources.

This news comes after Cheatle resigned from her position last month after failing to answer lawmakers’ questions about the Secret Service’s failure to stop the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump.

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