DRUNK SECRET SERVICE AGENTS....AGAIN
Secret Service agents on Obama detail sent home from Netherlands after night of drinking
By Carol D. Leonnig and David Nakamura,
Three Secret Service agents responsible for protecting President
Obama in Amsterdam this week were sent home and put on administrative
leave Sunday after going out for a night of drinking, according to three
people familiar with the incident. One of them was found drunk and
passed out in a hotel hallway, the people said.
The hotel staff alerted the U.S. Embassy in the Netherlands after
finding the unconscious agent Sunday morning, a day before Obama arrived
in the country, according to two of the people. The embassy then
alerted Secret Service managers on the presidential trip, which included
Secret Service Director Julia Pierson.
Secret Service spokesman
Ed Donovan confirmed Tuesday evening that the agency “did send three
employees home for disciplinary reasons” and that they were put on
administrative leave pending an investigation. Donovan declined to
comment further.
According to two people familiar with the
Amsterdam incident, the three individuals are all members of the Secret
Service’s Counter Assault Team, known in the agency as CAT.
The alleged behavior would violate new Secret Service rules adopted in the wake of a damaging scandal in Cartagena,
Colombia, in April 2012, when a dozen Secret Service agents and
officers had been drinking heavily and had brought prostitutes back to
their hotel rooms prior to the president’s arrival for an economics
summit.
Under the requirements,
anyone on an official trip is prohibited from drinking alcohol 10 hours
prior to being on duty. As members of the advance team for a
presidential trip, the CAT members would have been called to duty
sometime on Sunday for a classified briefing a day prior to the
president’s arrival on Monday. Drinking late into the night Saturday
evening and Sunday morning would have violated that rule.
Obama
landed in the Netherlands on Monday for the start of a high-stakes
week-long trip to Europe and Saudi Arabia in the midst of a tense
standoff with Russia over its incursion in Crimea. The agents involved
in the misconduct were among hundreds of U.S. personnel from the Secret
Service, military, State Department and other agencies sent to prepare
for his arrival and ensure his safety, including during his attendance
at the Nuclear Security Summit in the Hague with dozens of world
leaders.
The president’s visit started with a brief stop at the
Rijksmuseum, a fine-arts museum in Amsterdam, with Prime Minister Mark
Rutte. Obama traveled from the Hague to Brussels on Tuesday night.
The
three involved in the drinking incident were GS-13-level agents,
according to one person familiar with the investigation of the case. One
of the three was a “team leader” on counterassault, but he was not in a
supervisory position in the agency, the person said.
All three
people familiar with the case requested anonymity in order to discuss
details of an ongoing investigation. Pierson traveled on Air Force One
with Obama, and she is scheduled to remain on the trip with the
president as he continues to Rome and Saudi Arabia, one of the people
said.
The Counter Assault Team’s job is to protect the president
if he or his motorcade comes under attack and to fight off assailants
and draw fire while the protective detail removes the president from the
area.
Two former agency employees with experience on foreign
trips described the counterassault team as one of the most elite units
in the agency, responsible for “the last line of defense” for the
president. Those selected for CAT are required to be highly skilled
shooters and extremely physically fit, with a demanding training
regimen, said the two former employees, who spoke on the condition of
anonymity to describe internal operations.
There are also high
expectations for personal conduct on the squad, they said. On foreign
trips, one former agent recalled, the counterassault team often worked
shifts as long as 12 hours, the former agents recalled, and agents were
expected to get rest during their time off to be in prime condition.
“They
received the best technical training in the service,” said one of the
former agents. “They were the only team constantly training — training
on assaults, on evacuations, all sorts of things. They were very squared
away. It was really difficult to get on CAT.”
In the Cartagena
scandal, the Secret Service employees’ actions were discovered when one
prostitute got into a noisy dispute with agents in a hotel hallway about
an agent’s refusal to pay her fee.
Colombian police reported the
incident to the U.S. Embassy there.
Obama said at the time that
the agents’ behavior was unacceptable. “We’re representing the people of
the United States, and when we travel to another country I expect us to
observe the highest standards because we’re not just representing ourselves,” he said in Cartagena.
The
revelations in Cartagena led to the removal of 10 agents from their
jobs, multiple federal and congressional investigations and the rules
aimed at preventing similar activity in the future. Mark Sullivan, the
Secret Service director at the time, apologized for his employees’ conduct. Sullivan retired in February 2013 after 30 years in the agency.
Comments
Post a Comment