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    Home » Blog » Secret Service Director Refuses To Resign, Citing ‘Continuity Of Operations’ That Enabled Trump Assassin

    Secret Service Director Refuses To Resign, Citing ‘Continuity Of Operations’ That Enabled Trump Assassin

    July 18, 2024Updated:July 18, 2024 Editors Picks No Comments
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    Kimberly Cheatle, the director of secret services, does not intend to step down because she believes a” continuity of businesses” was necessary to stop former president Donald Trump’s planned assassin from entering the dark.

    In a crucial event, consistency of operations is important, and U.S. Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle has no plans to step down, according to Secret Service Spokesman Anthony Guglielmi, in a statement released on Wednesday. &nbsp,

    Guglielmi has been peddling the speech to different sources, including The New York Times, The Hill, and Fox News. But he neglected to discuss why it is so important to maintain the businesses, which left gaping holes in safety at Trump’s Butler, Pennsylvania, protest July 13. There, a gunman wounded the original senator and two guests, killing papa and fire Corey Comperatore.

    If Trump and other candidates are vulnerable as a result of the latest operations, why should they continue without significant adjustments.

    Negligent Security

    The Secret Service has responded to far more issues than the Surveillance at Trump’s Butler rally has raised.

    Democrats had been urging the government to revoke Trump’s Secret Service cover weeks prior to the death effort. His security information had been requesting more sources for weeks, only to have the Department of Homeland Security decline. Guglielmi asserted that this was bogus.

    The DHS even denied Secret Service protection to Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. until the test on Trump’s career.

    The Secret Service reportedly drew solutions from Trump’s already-limited security staff to attend a local Jill Biden function during the Butler march. Guglielmi even refuted this.

    Authorities established a clear line of sight from the balcony to Trump, excluding the building where the would-be killer planned to use, and drew the security boundary.

    Cheatle, previously in charge of guarding Pepsi services, said authorities did not place guns on the gunman’s roof because it was” tilted”. Many people pointed out that the gunman’s roof was almost flat and that snipers at the rally were stationed on a slanted roof, prompting fast criticism. A previous roofer called Cheatle’s reason “ridiculous“.

    Local authorities had already informed the Secret Service that they had not enough personnel to secure the gunman’s building. However, a police officer saw the gunman with a prism, and reported this to the control center. Additionally, he reported that the gunman had a backpack and was climbing the tower. &nbsp,

    20 days prior to the death effort, according to ABC News, Secret Service agents spotted the sniper on the roof. Rally guests noticed the gunman, pointing and shouting to local law enforcement. &nbsp,

    Trump continued speaking, unhindered. Then photographs started to sound.

    The bullet just missed Trump’s mind, grazing his proper ear. The original leader ducked. Secret Service agents dove on top of him, stood him up on stage, and ushered him to his car — his head unprotected. &nbsp,

    However, one female representative fumbled with her pouch, another took time to put her shades back on, and another stumbled back and forth.

    When a person you’ve been given the vision, the opportunity, and the responsibility to protect is whisked off the level bleeding from a gunshot wound, it’s difficult not to use the word “failure”,” ex-secret support broker Ken Valentine recently told The Federalist.

    It’s uncommon to have the guts to jump in front of bullets and prioritize the safety of another over one’s own. However, the Secret Service’s procedures are questioned by the events that occurred prior to and during the assassination attempt. &nbsp,

    Rebuffing Accountability

    Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson is ready to call for Cheatle’s resignation, he said to Fox News on Thursday.

    When Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., and Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., confronted Cheatle at the Republican National Convention on Wednesday, the Secret Service director ran away.

    ” This was an assassination attempt”, Blackburn said, following Cheatle. ” You owe the people answers. You owe President Trump answers”.

    Guglielmi said in a statement on Wednesday that Cheatle “deeply respects members of Congress” and is “fiercely committed to transparency in leading the Secret Service through the internal investigation and strengthening the agency through these crucial internal and external reviews.”

    According to The AP, House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., issued a subpoena on Wednesday to compel Cheatle to appear for a scheduled hearing on the assassination attempt on July 22. &nbsp,

    House Oversight Committee spokeswoman Jessica Collins said on Tuesday that Comer did this to “head off any attempts by DHS to backtrack on her appearance.”

    Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, also announced an investigation Wednesday into the “monumental security failure” that allowed the assassination attempt. He sent letters to the Secret Service, DHS, DHS Office of Inspector General, Department of Justice, and FBI requesting “records and responses”. He called the current lack of information “unacceptable”.


    The staff writer for election integrity is Logan Washburn. He graduated from Hillsdale College, served as Christopher Rufo’s editorial assistant, and has bylines in The Wall Street Journal, The Tennessean, and The Daily Caller. Logan was born and raised in rural Michigan, but he is primarily from Central Oregon.

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