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When people say the Secret Service’s job is to protect the president, they usually mean it in a physical way—not a political one.
But first, here are three new stories from The Atlantic.
- Nature’s response to the Supreme Court
- When a troubling book gets a Hollywood makeover
- What Joe Biden should know about Jamal Khashoggi
More Secret Than Service
The motto of the U.S. Secret Service is “Worthy of trust and confidence,” but recently the agency has put that to the test.
This week, the inspector general for the Department of Homeland Security, which houses the Secret Service, informed Congress that the agency had deleted text messages from January 5 and 6, 2021—the day before and day of the attack on the U.S. Capitol that sought to disrupt the certification of Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election—even though the inspector general’s office had requested that they be preserved as part of an investigation. (The IG is an in-house watchdog, whose powers are furnished by Congress.) The agency claimed that the messages were lost because of a “device-replacement program,” according to the inspector general’s letter, which was first reported by The Intercept.
A spokesperson angrily contested “the insinuation that the Secret Service maliciously deleted text messages following a request,” claiming it had independently begun resetting devices in January 2021 and saying that no texts were actually lost. (In a dark twist, the inspector general’s office is itself under investigation for undisclosed alleged misconduct.) The chair of the House committee investigating Donald Trump’s attempt to overturn the election said his panel would try to reconstruct the messages.
We’ll see where this story leads, but the Secret Service has long since forfeited the benefit of the doubt. Agencies try to flout their watchdogs all the time, and their excuses are frequently flimsy. But deleting records like this is pretty brazen, and if you’re willing to take the Secret Service’s excuse at face value, I’ve got some counterfeit $20 bills very real legal tender I’d like to offer you at a very reasonable price.
The disappearance of the texts fits with the agency’s recent pattern of behavior. As the Washington Post reporter Carol Leonnig, the foremost chronicler of the contemporary Secret Service, has written, “The Secret Service’s claim of being politically independent … was tested by Trump’s tenure in the White House.” In one major example, a high-ranking Secret Service official, Tony Ornato, made a deeply unusual move from a civil-service job to being deputy White House chief of staff. New agents were assigned to Biden’s protective detail when he took office, reportedly because of concerns that the old agents were too politically close to Trump.
Mystery shrouds the agency’s work on January 6—especially with records missing. During his speech at the infamous rally on January 6, Trump told attendees to march on the Capitol, and reportedly wanted to go himself. Secret Service agents refused to allow him, citing security concerns. The former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson told the House committee investigating January 6 that Ornato recounted to her what happened next: Trump supposedly lunged at the steering wheel of a presidential SUV and tried to force an agent to drive him to the Capitol. Through a spokesperson, the Secret Service denied the story, and neither Ornato nor the agent have spoken about it publicly. But CNN reports that similar stories were circulating within the Secret Service for months, and a D.C. police officer reportedly corroborated the account as well.
Agents were involved in another strange episode a little later on January 6. As the Trump-incited mob breached the Capitol, Vice President Mike Pence was whisked to safety, and his security detail reportedly sought to get him into his armored limousine. But Pence refused, reportedly fearing that the agents would remove him from the building, which might have further disrupted the certification of Biden’s win.
The agency’s independence isn’t the only thing that looks shaky: so does the other pillar of its reputation, competence. This week, an employee staffing Biden’s trip to Israel was sent home after a reported physical altercation with a woman there. (This isn’t the first time an employee has been shipped back to the States for bad behavior.) In April, the FBI alleged that two men impersonating federal agents had fooled the Secret Service. And earlier this month, Biden announced that the agency’s chief was leaving to join the social-media company Snap (where at least he won’t have to worry about preserving his messages).
These incidents are just part of a string of snafus dating back more than a decade. During the Obama administration, the Secret Service allowed people to fire shots at the White House, permitted an armed guard to ride an elevator with the president, got into trouble overseas, and had car accidents after drinking. Officials were repeatedly sacked—including one who was investigating agents visiting sex workers overseas, until he himself was arrested in a prositution investigation.
This sort of haplessness is entertaining when it’s the Keystone Kops doing it on celluloid. But when the issues involved are as serious as the life of the president or attempts to subvert an election, laughter doesn’t come so easily.
Related:
Today’s News
- After months of negotiations, Senator Joe Manchin said that he would not support new spending on climate or energy programs, or new tax increases for wealthy individuals and corporations. His announcement is a blow to the Democratic Party’s agenda.
- President Biden made his first presidential visit to Saudi Arabia and met with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
- A preliminary autopsy report revealed that Jayland Walker, a 25-year-old Black man who died at the hands of Akron, Ohio, police last month, was shot dozens of times; 26 bullets were removed from his body.
Dispatches
- The Third Rail: Jordan Peterson is terribly wrong about Russia and the West, David French argues.
- Unsettled Territory: Imani Perry reflects on how to be an honest historian.
- The Books Briefing: Elise Hannum explores books about the blurry line between our personal and professional lives.
Evening Read
Seriously, What’s Making All These Mysterious Space Signals?
By Marina Koren
Astronomy can be, in some ways, a bit like the classic board game Clue. Scientists explore a sprawling but ultimately contained world, collecting pieces of information and testing out theories about a big mystery. You can’t cover every corner, but with the right combination of strategy and luck, you can gather enough clues to make a reasonable guess at the tidy answer—who, where, and how—enclosed in a little yellow envelope at the center of it all.
More From The Atlantic
- “Netflix thinks exactly like an old movie studio.”
- The Supreme Court has ushered in a new era of religion at school.
- Joe Manchin’s fickleness is a needless catastrophe
Culture Break
Read. Ingrid Rojas Contreras’s new memoir, The Man Who Could Move Clouds, explores the legacy of her grandfather, a community healer who was said to have magical gifts.
Or spend your weekend with something else from our list of 21 books to match your mood.
Watch. The new FX/Hulu series The Bear is a study of masculinity in crisis, and it captures a toxic workplace like no other show has.
Looking for a movie? Here are 25 feel-good options you’ll want to watch again and again.
And there’s always Netflix’s adaptation of Jane Austen’s Persuasion, which our writer Helen Lewis found enjoyable despite the bizarreness of its modernization.
P.S.
Thanks for reading this week. It’s been a privilege to helm this ship for a few nautical miles, and I appreciate your eyeballs and emails. When I’m not writing this newsletter or chronicling the every move of Donald J. Trump or reporting on criminal justice and voting rights, I moonlight as a jazz writer here. I’m going to send you off to the weekend with a track from one of the best records in the genre this year, Immanuel Wilkins’s The 7th Hand. Wilkins is a 24-year-old alto saxophonist from Philadelphia who already seems to be one of his generation’s defining jazz musicians. As my friend Gio Russonello has noted, Wilkins’s music seamlessly traverses straight-ahead jazz, gospel, the avant-garde, and even contemporary R&B. The outwardly tranquil, subtly intense (home in on Kweku Sumbry’s drums) track “Fugitive Ritual, Selah” is a good ramp into the weekend.
— David
Isabel Fattal contributed to this newsletter.