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Wikipedia

United States Secret Service

The United States Secret Service (USSS or Secret Service) is a federal law enforcement agency under the Department of Homeland Security charged with conducting criminal investigations and protecting U.S. political leaders, their families, and visiting heads of state or government.[3] Until 2003, the Secret Service was part of the Department of the Treasury, as the agency was founded in 1865 to combat the then-widespread counterfeiting of U.S. currency.[4] President Abraham Lincoln signed the legislation on April 14, 1865, just a few hours before he was assassinated.[5] In 1901, the Secret Service was also assigned to presidential protection duties.[6]

United States Secret Service
U.S Secret Service emblem
Secret Service special agent badge
U.S. Secret Service flag
Common nameSecret Service
AbbreviationUSSS
Agency overview
FormedJuly 5, 1865; 158 years ago (1865-07-05)
Employees7,000+ (2019)[1]
Annual budgetUS$2.23 billion (2019)[1]
Operational structure
HeadquartersWashington, D.C., U.S.
Agency executives
Parent agencyU.S. Department of Homeland Security (2003–present)
U.S. Department of the Treasury (1865–2003)
Facilities
Field and resident offices116
Overseas offices20
Website
www.secretservice.gov

Primary missions Edit

The Secret Service is mandated by Congress with two distinct and critical national security missions: protecting the nation's leaders and safeguarding the financial and critical infrastructure of the United States.

Protective mission Edit

The Secret Service is tasked with ensuring the safety of the President of the United States, the Vice President of the United States, the President-elect of the United States, the Vice President-elect of the United States, and their immediate families; former presidents, their spouses and their minor children under the age of 16; those in the presidential line of succession, major presidential and vice-presidential candidates and their spouses; and visiting foreign heads of state and heads of government. By custom, it also provides protection to the Secretary of the Treasury and Secretary of Homeland Security, as well as other persons as directed by the president (usually the White House Chief of Staff and National Security Advisor, among others). By federal statute, the president and vice president may not refuse this protection.[7] The Secret Service also provides physical security for the White House Complex; the neighboring Treasury Department building; the vice president's residence; the principal private residences of the president, vice president and former presidents; and all foreign diplomatic missions in Washington, D.C. The protective mission includes protective operations to coordinate manpower and logistics with state and local law enforcement in the US, protective advances to conduct site and venue assessments for protectees, and protective intelligence to investigate all manners of threats made against protectees. The Secret Service is the lead agency in charge of the planning, coordination, and implementation of security operations for events designated as National Special Security Events (NSSE). As part of the service's mission of preventing an incident before it occurs, the agency relies on meticulous advance work and threat assessments developed by its Intelligence Division to identify potential risks to protectees.[8]

Investigative mission Edit

The Secret Service is tasked with safeguarding the payment and financial systems of the United States from a wide range of financial and cyber-based crimes. Financial investigations include counterfeit U.S. currency, bank and financial institution fraud, mail fraud, wire fraud, illicit financing operations, and major conspiracies. Cyber investigations include cybercrime, network intrusions, identity theft, access device fraud, credit card fraud, and intellectual property crimes. The Secret Service is also a member of the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) which investigates and combats terrorism on a national and international scale. Also, the Secret Service investigates missing and exploited children and is a partner of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC).[9]

The Secret Service's initial responsibility was to investigate the counterfeiting of U.S. currency, which was rampant following the American Civil War. The agency then evolved into the United States' first domestic intelligence and counterintelligence agency. Many of the agency's missions were later taken over by subsequent agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), and IRS Criminal Investigation Division (IRS-CI).

Dual objective Edit

 
Secret Service agents conducting electronic investigations

The Secret Service combines the two responsibilities into a dual objective. The two core missions of protection and investigation synergize with each other, providing benefits to special agents during the course of their careers. Skills developed during the course of investigations which are also used in an agent's protective duties include but are not limited to:

  • Partnerships that are created between field offices and local law enforcement during the course of investigations being used to gather both protective intelligence and in coordinating protection events.
  • Tactical operation (e.g. surveillance, arrests, and search warrants) and law enforcement writing (e.g. affidavits, after action reports, and operations plans) skills being applied to both investigative and protective duties.
  • Proficiency in analyzing handwriting and forgery techniques being applied in protective investigations of handwritten letters and suspicious package threats.
  • Expertise in investigating electronic and financial crimes being applied in protective investigations of threats made against the nation's leaders on the Internet.

Protection of the nation's highest elected leaders and other government officials is one of the primary missions of the Secret Service. After the 1901 assassination of President William McKinley, Congress also directed the Secret Service to protect the president of the United States. The Secret Service investigates thousands of incidents each year of individuals threatening the president of the United States.

The Secret Service is authorized by 18 U.S.C. § 3056(a) to protect:[10]

  • The president, vice president (or the next individual in the order of succession, should the vice presidency be vacant), president-elect and vice president-elect
  • The immediate families of the above individuals
  • Former presidents and their spouses for their lifetimes, except if the spouse remarries
  • Children of former presidents under the age of 16
  • Visiting heads of state or government and their spouses traveling with them
  • Other distinguished foreign visitors to the United States and official representatives of the United States performing special missions abroad, when the president directs protection be provided
  • Major presidential and vice presidential candidates and, within 120 days of a general presidential election, their spouses
  • Former vice presidents, their spouses, and their children under 16 years of age, for up to 6 months from the date the former vice president leaves office (the Secretary of Homeland Security can authorize temporary protection of these individuals at any time after that period)

In addition to the above, the Secret Service can also protect other individuals by executive order of the president.[11] Under Presidential Policy Directive 22, "National Special Security Events", the Secret Service is the lead agency for the design and implementation of operational security plans for events designated a NSSE by the secretary of homeland security.

 
Sign at the Obama family home in 2021 stating the area is protected by the Secret Service

There have been changes to the protection of former presidents over time. Under the original Former Presidents Act, former presidents and their spouses were entitled to lifetime protection, subject to limited exceptions. In 1994, this was amended to reduce the protection period to 10 years after a former president left office, starting with presidents assuming the role after January 1, 1997. On January 10, 2013, President Barack Obama signed legislation reversing this limit and reinstating lifetime protection to all former presidents.[12] This change impacted Presidents Obama and G.W. Bush, as well as all future presidents.[13]

Protection of government officials is not solely the responsibility of the Secret Service, with many other agencies, such as the United States Capitol Police, Supreme Court Police and Diplomatic Security Service, providing personal protective services to domestic and foreign officials. However, while these agencies are nominally responsible for services to other officers of the United States and senior dignitaries, the Secret Service provides protective services at the highest-level – i.e. for heads of state and heads of government.

The Secret Service's other primary mission is investigative; to protect the payment and financial systems of the United States from a wide range of financial and electronic-based crimes including counterfeit U.S. currency, bank and financial institution fraud, illicit financing operations, cybercrime, identity theft, intellectual property crimes, and any other violations that may affect the United States economy and financial systems. The agency's key focus is on large, high-dollar economic impact cases involving organized criminal groups. Financial criminals include embezzling bank employees, armed robbers at automatic teller machines, heroin traffickers, and criminal organizations that commit bank fraud on a global scale.

The USSS plays a leading role in facilitating relationships between other law enforcement entities, the private sector, and academia. The service maintains the Electronic Crimes Task Forces, which focus on identifying and locating international cyber criminals connected to cyber intrusions, bank fraud, data breaches, and other computer-related crimes. Additionally, the Secret Service runs the National Computer Forensics Institute (NCFI), which provides law enforcement officers, prosecutors, and judges with cyber training and information to combat cybercrime.

In the face of budget pressure, hiring challenges and some high-profile lapses in its protective service role in 2014, the Brookings Institution and some members of Congress are asking whether the agency's focus should shift more to the protective mission, leaving more of its original mission to other agencies.[14][15]

History Edit

Early years Edit

 
Logo of the United States Secret Service

With a reported one third of the currency in circulation being counterfeit at the time,[16] Abraham Lincoln established a commission to make recommendations to remedy the problem. The Secret Service was later established on July 5, 1865, in Washington, D.C., to suppress counterfeit currency. Chief William P. Wood was sworn in by Secretary of the Treasury Hugh McCulloch. It was commissioned in Washington, D.C. as the "Secret Service Division" of the Department of the Treasury with the mission of suppressing counterfeiting. At the time, the only other federal law enforcement agencies were the United States Customs Service, the United States Park Police, the U.S. Post Office Department's Office of Instructions and Mail Depredations (now known as the United States Postal Inspection Service), and the United States Marshals Service. The Marshals did not have the manpower to investigate all crime under federal jurisdiction, so the Secret Service began investigating a wide range of crimes from murder to bank robbery to illegal gambling.

20th century Edit

After the assassination of President William McKinley in 1901, Congress informally requested that the Secret Service provide presidential protection. A year later, the Secret Service assumed full-time responsibility for presidential protection. In 1902, William Craig became the first Secret Service agent to die while on duty, in a road accident while riding in the presidential carriage.[17]

The Secret Service was the first U.S. domestic intelligence and counterintelligence agency. Domestic intelligence collection and counterintelligence responsibilities were later vested in the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) upon the FBI's creation in 1908.

Taft Mexican Summit (1909) Edit

In 1909, President William H. Taft agreed to meet with Mexican president Porfirio Díaz in El Paso, Texas, and Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, the first meeting between a U.S. and a Mexican president and also the first time an American president visited Mexico.[18] The historic summit resulted in serious assassination threats and other security concerns for the then small Secret Service, so the Texas Rangers, 4,000 U.S. and Mexican troops, BOI agents, U.S. Marshals, and an additional 250-man private security detail led by Frederick Russell Burnham, the celebrated scout, were all called in by Chief John Wilkie to provide added security.[19][20] On October 16, the day of the summit, Burnham discovered a man holding a concealed palm pistol standing at the El Paso Chamber of Commerce building along the procession route.[21] The man was captured and disarmed only a few feet from Díaz and Taft.[22]

1920s Edit

 
First female operative, Florence Bolan

The first unofficial female special agent was Florence Bolan.[23] She joined the service in 1917.[24] In 1924, Bolan was promoted to operative (the title preceding special agent) where she performed duties, such as searching female prisoners and engaging in occasional fieldwork.[24]

1940s Edit

The Secret Service assisted in arresting Japanese American leaders and in the Japanese American internment during World War II.[25]

1950s Edit

In 1950, President Harry S. Truman was residing in Blair House while the White House, across the street, was undergoing renovations. On November 1, 1950, two Puerto Rican nationalists, Oscar Collazo and Griselio Torresola, approached Blair House with the intent to assassinate President Truman. Collazo and Torresola opened fire on Private Leslie Coffelt and other White House Police officers. Though mortally wounded by three shots from a 9 mm German Luger to his chest and abdomen, Private Coffelt returned fire, killing Torresola with a single shot to his head. Collazo was also shot, but survived his injuries and served 29 years in prison before returning to Puerto Rico in late 1979.[citation needed] Coffelt is the only member of the Secret Service killed while protecting a US president against an assassination attempt (Special Agent Tim McCarthy stepped in front of President Ronald Reagan during the assassination attempt of March 30, 1981, and took a bullet to the chest but made a full recovery[26]).

1960s Edit

In 1968, as a result of Robert F. Kennedy's assassination, Congress authorized protection of major presidential and vice presidential candidates and nominees.[27] In 1965 and 1968, Congress also authorized lifetime protection of the spouses of deceased presidents unless they remarry and of the children of former presidents until age 16.[28]

1980s Edit

 
Secret Service analyst examining counterfeit documents

In 1984, the US Congress passed the Comprehensive Crime Control Act, which extended the Secret Service's jurisdiction over credit card fraud and computer fraud.[29]

1990s Edit

In 1990, the Secret Service initiated Operation Sundevil, which they originally intended as a sting against malicious hackers, allegedly responsible for disrupting telephone services across the entire United States. The operation, which was later described by Bruce Sterling in his book The Hacker Crackdown, affected a great number of people unrelated to hacking, and led to no convictions. The Secret Service, however, was sued and required to pay damages.[citation needed] On March 1, 1990, the Secret Service served a search warrant on Steve Jackson Games, a small company in Austin, Texas, seizing three computers and over 300 floppy disks. In the subsequent lawsuit, the judge reprimanded the Secret Service, calling their warrant preparation "sloppy."[30]

In 1994 and 1995, it ran an undercover sting called Operation Cybersnare.[31] The Secret Service has concurrent jurisdiction with the FBI over certain violations of federal computer crime laws. They have created 24 Electronic Crimes Task Forces (ECTFs) across the United States. These task forces are partnerships between the service, federal/state and local law enforcement, the private sector and academia aimed at combating technology-based crimes.[citation needed]

In 1998, President Bill Clinton signed Presidential Decision Directive 62, which established National Special Security Events (NSSE). That directive made the Secret Service responsible for security at designated events. In 1999, the United States Secret Service Memorial Building was dedicated in DC, granting the agency its first headquarters. Prior to this, the agency's different departments were based in office space around the DC area.[32]

21st century Edit

2000s Edit

September 11 attacks Edit

The New York City Field office was located at 7 World Trade Center. Immediately after the World Trade Center was attacked as part of the September 11 attacks, Special Agents and other New York Field office employees were among the first to respond with first aid. Sixty-seven Special Agents in New York City, at and near the New York Field Office, helped to set up triage areas and evacuate the towers. One Secret Service employee, Master Special Officer Craig Miller,[33] died during the rescue efforts. On August 20, 2002, Director Brian L. Stafford awarded the Director's Valor Award to employees who assisted in the rescue attempts.[34]

Domestic expansion Edit
 
Secret Service Electronic Crimes Task Force (ECTF)
 
Secret Service Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Task Force (AFMLTF)

Effective March 1, 2003, the Secret Service transferred from the Treasury to the newly established Department of Homeland Security.[35]

The USA Patriot Act, signed into law by President George W. Bush on October 26, 2001, mandated the Secret Service to establish a nationwide network of ECTFs in addition to the one already active in New York. As such, this mandate expanded on the agency's first ECTF—the New York Electronic Crimes Task Force, formed in 1995—which brought together federal, state and local law enforcement, prosecutors, private-industry companies, and academia. These bodies collectively provide necessary support and resources to field investigations that meet any one of the following criteria: significant economic or community impact; participation of organized criminal groups involving multiple districts or transnational organizations; or use of schemes involving new technology.[36][37]

The network prioritizes investigations that meet the following criteria:

  • Significant economic or community impact,
  • Participation of multiple-district or transnational organized criminal groups,
  • Use of new technology as a means to commit crime.

Investigations conducted by ECTFs include crimes such as computer generated counterfeit currency; bank fraud; virus and worm proliferation; access device fraud; telecommunications fraud; Internet threats; computer system intrusions and cyberattacks; phishing/spoofing; assistance with Internet-related child pornography and exploitation; and identity theft.[38]

International expansion Edit
 
Secret Service Cyber Intelligence Center (CIS)

On July 6, 2009, the U.S. Secret Service expanded its fight on cybercrime by creating the first European Electronic Crime Task Force, based on the successful U.S. domestic model, through a memorandum of understanding with Italian police and postal officials. Over a year later, on August 9, 2010, the agency expanded its European involvement by creating its second overseas ECTF in the United Kingdom.[39][40]

Both task forces are said to concentrate on a wide range of "computer-based criminal activity," including:

2010s Edit

As of 2010, the service had over 6,500 employees: 3,200 Special Agents, 1,300 Uniformed Division Officers, and 2,000 technical and administrative employees.[41] Special agents serve on protective details and investigate financial, cyber, and homeland security-related crimes.

In September 2014, the United States Secret Service came under criticism following two high-profile incidents involving intruders at the White House. One such intruder entered the East Room of the White House through an unlocked door.[42]

2020s Edit

On April 15, 2020, the ICE Homeland Security Investigations unit[43] launched "Operation Stolen Promise" that targets COVID-19 related fraud. The operation conscripted resources from various branches of law enforcement and the government, including the U.S. Secret Service.[44] About $2 trillion in the relief package known as the CARES Act were earmarked by law in March 2020, bringing unemployment benefits and loans to millions of Americans. However, as Secret Service spokesmen subsequently pointed out, the Act also opened up opportunities for criminals to fraudulently apply for aid. By the end of 2021, nearly two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, the Secret Service had seized more than $1.2 billion in relief funds appropriated by fraudsters.[45]

On June 1, 2020, during a peaceful protest outside Lafayette Square, the U.S. Secret Service acted contrary to an operational plan and began advancing seven minutes before U.S. Park Police gave any dispersal warnings.[46] This early deployment increased tensions between law enforcement and the protesters.[46] They faced resistance and used pepper spray in response to eggs and bottles being thrown.[46] Attorney General William Barr spoke with the U.S. Park Police operational commander seven minutes before the Secret Service began advancing, and again later, before President Trump visited a nearby Parish House to pose for a photo while holding a bible.[46] The U.S. Secret Service later apologized[46] but Joseph Cuffari, the Department of Homeland Security Inspector General, prevented career officials from investigating the role U.S. Secret Service played in the Trump administration’s controversial use of force to remove protesters that day.[47]

In August 2020, a Secret Service officer shot a man once in the chest at the corner of 17th street and Pennsylvania during one of then-President Trump’s press conferences. The President was evacuated but returned later and told the White House press corps that the man had a gun. However, according to court documents, the man was actually holding a comb, told the officers he was armed and took a shooting stance before being shot. The man is schizophrenic and was charged with simple assault of a law enforcement officer.[48][49]

A day before the January 6 United States Capitol attack in 2021, the Secret Service warned Capitol Police of threats of violence that Capitol Police officers could face violence at the hands of supporters of President Donald Trump.[50] On January 6, Secret Service agents provided security in and around the United States Capitol, as well as evacuating Vice President Mike Pence during the riot.[51] Testimony in Congress indicates Pence was concerned his security detail would remove him from the Capitol, stopping him from completing his duty to oversee the final count of electoral college votes. At the center of the controversy surrounding the Secret Service and January 6 investigations is Anthony M. Ornato, who had been the head of Trump's security detail, but took the unprecedented step of leaving the Secret Service to become deputy White House chief of staff and becoming a "key part of Trump’s effort to get reelected."[52]

The Secret Service assisted in the seizure of hacker forum RaidForums in 2022.[53]

In April 2022, four Secret Service agents, one of whom was assigned to First Lady Jill Biden, were placed on leave after accepting lavish gifts, rent free apartments, and other bribes from 2 men ultimately convicted of impersonating federal officers.[54][55]

On August 24, 2022, President Joe Biden named Kim Cheatle, an official with PepsiCo, as the agency's new director. Cheatle was in the Secret Service for 27 years and became the first woman to serve as assistant director of protective operations, a department tasked with protecting the president and dignitaries.[56]

Attacks on presidents Edit

 
Secret Service agents responding to the assassination attempt of Ronald Reagan by John Hinckley, Jr. on March 30, 1981

Since the 1960s, presidents John F. Kennedy (killed), Gerald Ford (twice attacked, but uninjured) and Ronald Reagan (seriously wounded) have been attacked while appearing in public.[57][58] Agents on scene, though not injured, during attacks on presidents include William Greer and Roy Kellerman. One of the agents was Robert DeProspero, the Special Agent In Charge (SAIC) of Reagan's Presidential Protective Division (PPD) from January 1982 to April 1985. DeProspero was deputy to Jerry Parr, the SAIC of PPD during the Reagan assassination attempt on March 30, 1981.[59][60]

 
Secret Service agents guard President George W. Bush in 2008

The Kennedy assassination spotlighted the bravery of two Secret Service agents. First, an agent protecting Mrs. Kennedy, Clint Hill, was riding in the car directly behind the presidential limousine when the attack began. While the shooting continued, Hill leaped from the running board of the car he was riding on and jumped onto the back of the president's moving car and guided Mrs. Kennedy from the trunk back into the rear seat of the car. He then shielded the president and the first lady with his body until the car arrived at the hospital.

Rufus Youngblood was riding in the vice-presidential car. When the shots were fired, he vaulted over the front seat and threw his body over Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson.[61] That evening, Johnson called Secret Service Chief James J. Rowley and cited Youngblood's bravery.[62][63] Youngblood would later recall some of this in his memoir, Twenty Years in the Secret Service.

The period following the Kennedy assassination was the most difficult in the modern history of the agency. Press reports indicated that morale among the agents was "low" for months following the assassination.[64][65] The agency overhauled its procedures in the wake of the Kennedy killing. Training, which until that time had been confined largely to "on-the-job" efforts, was systematized and regularized.

The Reagan assassination attempt also involved several Secret Service agents, particularly agent Tim McCarthy, who spread his stance to protect Reagan as six bullets were being fired by the would-be assassin, John Hinckley Jr.[66] McCarthy survived a .22-caliber round in the abdomen. For his bravery, McCarthy received the NCAA Award of Valor in 1982.[67] Jerry Parr, the agent who pushed President Reagan into the limousine, and made the critical decision to divert the presidential motorcade to George Washington University Hospital instead of returning to the White House, was also honored with U.S. Congress commendations for his actions that day.[68]

Significant investigations Edit

Arrest and indictment of Max Ray Butler, co-founder of the Carders Market carding website. Butler was indicted by a federal grand jury in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, after his September 5, 2007, arrest, on wire fraud and identity theft charges. According to the indictment, Butler hacked over the Internet into computers at financial institutions and credit card processing centers and sold the tens of thousands of credit card numbers that he acquired in the process.[69]

Operation Firewall: In October 2004, 28 suspects—located across eight U.S. states and six countries—were arrested on charges of identity theft, computer fraud, credit-card fraud, and conspiracy. Nearly 30 national and foreign field offices of the U.S. Secret Service, including the newly established national ECTFs, and countless local enforcement agencies from around the globe, were involved in this operation. Collectively, the arrested suspects trafficked in at least 1.7 million stolen credit card numbers, which amounted to $4.3 million of losses to financial institutions. However, authorities estimated that prevented loss to the industry was in the hundreds of millions of dollars. The operation, which started in July 2003 and lasted for more than a year, led investigators to identify three cybercriminal groups: Shadowcrew, Carderplanet, and Darkprofits.[70]

From the investigation, there was the arrest and indictment of Albert Gonzalez and 11 other individuals: three U.S. citizens, one from Estonia, three from Ukraine, two from the People's Republic of China, one from Belarus, and one known only by an online alias. They were arrested on August 5, 2008, for the theft and sale of more than 40 million credit and debit card numbers from major U.S. retailers, including TJX Companies, BJ's Wholesale Club, OfficeMax, Boston Market, Barnes & Noble, Sports Authority, Forever 21, and DSW. Gonzalez, the main organizer of the scheme, was charged with computer fraud, wire fraud, access device fraud, aggravated identity theft, and conspiracy for his leading role in the crime.[71]

Personnel Edit

 
Secret Service agents protecting President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama

Special Agent Edit

 
Secret Service agents executing a protective operation

The Secret Service special agent position is highly competitive. In 2011, the service accepted less than 1% of its 15,600 special agent applicants.[72]

At a minimum, a prospective agent must be a U.S. citizen, possess a current valid driver's license, be in excellent health and physical condition, possess visual acuity no worse than 20/100 uncorrected or correctable to 20/20 in each eye, and be between age 21–37 at the time of appointment,[73] but eligible veterans may apply past age 37. In 2009, the Office of Personnel Management issued implementation guidance on the Isabella v. Department of State court decision: OPM Letter.[74]

Prospective agents must also qualify for a TS/SCI (Top Secret / Sensitive Compartmented Information) clearance, and undergo an extensive background investigation, to include in-depth interviews, drug screening, medical diagnosis, and full-scope polygraph examination.[73]

 
Secret Service agent trainees at the James J. Rowley Training Center (RTC)

Special agents receive training in two locations, totaling approximately 31 weeks. The first phase, the Criminal Investigator Training Program (CITP) is conducted at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC) in Glynco, Georgia, lasting approximately 13 weeks. The second phase, the Special Agent Training Course (SATC) is conducted at the Secret Service Academy, James J. Rowley Training Center (JJRTC), just outside Washington, D.C. in Laurel, Maryland, lasting approximately 18 weeks.[75]

 
Secret Service agent trainees practice executing a search warrant.

A typical special agent career path, depending upon performance and promotions that affect individual assignments, begins with the first six to eight years on the job assigned to a field office. Applicants are directed to list their office location preference during the application process, and upon receiving a final job offer, usually have several locations to choose from.[73] After their field office experience, agents are usually transferred to a protective assignment where they will stay for three to five years. Following their protective assignment, many agents return to a field office for the rest of their careers, or opt for a headquarters based assignment located in Washington, D.C. During their careers, agents also have the opportunity to work overseas in one of the agency's international field offices. This typically requires foreign language training to ensure language proficiency when working alongside the agency's foreign law enforcement counterparts.[73]

Special agents are hired at the GL-07, GL-09, or GS-11 grade level, depending on individual qualifications and/or education.[73] Agents are eligible for promotion on a yearly basis, from GL-07, to GL-09, to GS-11, to GS-12, to GS-13. The full performance grade level for a journeyman field agent is GS-13, which a GL-07, GL-09, or GS-11 agent may reach in as little as four, three, or two years respectively. GS-13 agents are eligible for competitive promotion to supervisory positions, which encompasses the GS-14, GS-15, and SES grade levels. GS-13 agents who wish to remain as journeyman field agents, will continue to advance the GS-13 step level, capping at GS-13 Step 10.

Special agents also receive Law Enforcement Availability Pay (LEAP), a type of premium overtime pay which provides them with an additional 25% bonus pay on top of their salary, as agents are required to work an average workweek of 50 hours as opposed to 40.[76] Therefore an agent living in the Greater New York City area (NY, NJ, CT) will earn an annual salary of $77,315 (GL-07), $86,226 (GL-09), $100,961 (GS-11), $121,010 (GS-12), $143,897 (GS-13), $170,043 (GS-14), and $183,500 (GS-15). Journeyman field agents at GS-13 Step 10 are also paid a salary of $183,500.[77]

Due to the nature of their work and unique among their federal law enforcement counterparts (e.g. FBI, DEA, ATF, ICE), Secret Service agents are regularly eligible for scheduled overtime pay (in addition to LEAP), and enjoy a raised statutory pay cap of $212,100 per year (Level II of the Executive Schedule) as opposed to the standard pay cap of $183,500 per year (Level IV of the Executive Schedule).[78]

Uniformed Division Officer Edit

 
Secret Service officer and his police dog as part of the Emergency Response Team (ERT)

The Secret Service Uniformed Division is a security police similar to the U.S. Capitol Police or DHS Federal Protective Service and is in charge of protecting the physical White House grounds and foreign diplomatic missions in the Washington, D.C. area. Established in 1922 as the White House Police, this organization was fully integrated into the Secret Service in 1930. In 1970, the protection of foreign diplomatic missions was added to the force's responsibilities, and its name was changed to the Executive Protective Service. The name United States Secret Service Uniformed Division was adopted in 1977.

Secret Service Uniformed Division officers provide protection for the White House Complex, the vice president's residence, the main Treasury Building and Annex, and foreign diplomatic missions and embassies in the Washington, D.C., area. Additionally, Uniformed Division officers travel in support of presidential, vice presidential and foreign head of state government missions.[79] Officers may, as their careers progress, be selected to participate in one of several specialized units, including the:

  • Canine Unit: Performing security sweeps and responding to bomb threats and suspicious packages.
  • Emergency Response Team: Providing a coordinated tactical response for the White House and other protected facilities.
  • Counter-sniper Team: Utilizing observation, sighting equipment and high-performance weapons to provide a secure environment for protectees.
  • Motorcade Support Unit: Providing motorcycle tactical support for official movements of motorcades.
  • Crime Scene Search Unit: Photographing, collecting and processing physical and latent evidence.
  • Office of Training: Serving as firearms and classroom instructors or recruiters.
  • Special Operations Section: Handling special duties and functions at the White House Complex, including conducting the daily congressional and public tours of the White House.[79]

Weapons and equipment Edit

 
Two snipers protect Vice President Mike Pence in Indianapolis in 2017.

Since the agency's inception, a variety of weapons have been carried by its agents.

Weapons Edit

Agents and officers are trained on standard shoulder weapons that include the FN P90 submachine gun, the 9mm Heckler & Koch MP5 submachine gun, and the 12-gauge Remington 870 shotgun.[80]

 
Secret Service counter-sniper marksman on top of the White House's roof, armed with a sniper rifle

As a non-lethal option, Special Agents, Special Officers, and Uniformed Division Officers are armed with the ASP 16" expandable baton, and Uniformed Division officers also carry pepper spray.

Special Operations Division (SOD) units are authorized to use a variety of non-standard weapons. The Counter Assault Team (CAT) and the Emergency Response Team (ERT) both use the 5.56mm Knight's Armament Company SR-16 CQB assault rifle in an 11.5" configuration. CAT also deploys 12 gauge Remington 870 MCS breaching shotguns. Uniform Division technicians assigned to the Counter Sniper (CS) team use custom built .300 Winchester Magnum-chambered bolt-action rifles referred to as JARs ("Just Another Rifle")[citation needed]. These rifles are built with Remington 700 long actions in Accuracy International stocks and use Schmidt & Bender optics. CS technicians also use the 7.62mm KAC SR-25/Mk11 Mod 0 semi-automatic sniper rifle with a Trijicon 5.5× ACOG optic.[81]

Sidearms Edit

The Secret Service's current duty sidearm, the SIG-Sauer P229 double-action/single-action pistol chambered .357 SIG, entered service in 1999. It is the issued handgun to all special agents as well as officers of the Uniformed Division. As of 2019, the SIG-Sauer P229 is scheduled to be replaced with Glock 9mm pistols.[82] Most special agents will be issued the Glock 19 Gen 5 MOS with forward slide serrations, Ameriglo Bold night sights, and a Streamlight TLR-7A weapon light.[83] US Secret Service's Special Operations will be issued the Glock 47 with Ameriglo Bold sights and a Surefire X300 Ultra weapon light.[84][85]

Badges Edit

Attire Edit

 
Secret Service agent in business suit working President Obama's protection detail

Special agents and special officers of the Secret Service wear attire that is appropriate for their surroundings, in order to blend in as much as possible. In most circumstances, the attire of a close protection shift is a conservative suit, but it can range from a tuxedo to casual clothing as required by the environment. Stereotypically, Secret Service agents are often portrayed wearing reflective sunglasses and a communication earpiece. Often their attire is customized to conceal the wide array of equipment worn in service. Agents wear a distinctive lapel pin that identifies them to other agents.[86]

The attire for Uniformed Division Officers includes standard police uniforms or utility uniforms and ballistic/identification vests for members of the counter-sniper team, Emergency Response Team (ERT), and canine officers. The shoulder patch of the Uniformed Division consists of the U.S. coat of arms on white or black, depending on the garment. Also, the shoulder patch is embroidered with "U.S. Secret Service Uniformed Division Police" around the emblem.[87]

Vehicles Edit

 
Ford Taurus of the Uniformed Division of the Secret Service.
 
An Allegheny County Police officer and his working dog screening a US Secret Service vehicle for explosives.

When transporting the president in a motorcade, the Secret Service uses a fleet of custom-built armored Cadillac Limousines, the newest and largest version of which is known as "The Beast". Armored Chevrolet Suburbans are also used when logistics require such a vehicle or when a more low-profile appearance is required. For official movement, the limousine is affixed with U.S. and presidential flags and the presidential seal on the rear doors. For unofficial events, the vehicles are left sterile and unadorned.[34]

Field offices Edit

 
Secret Service Field Offices

The Secret Service has agents assigned to 136 field offices and field agencies, and the headquarters in Washington, D.C. The service's offices are located in cities throughout the United States and the world. The offices in Lyon and The Hague are respectively responsible for liaison with the headquarters of Interpol and Europol, located in those cities.[88]

Misconduct Edit

On April 14, 2012, the U.S. Secret Service placed 11 agents on administrative leave as the agency investigated allegations that the men brought prostitutes to their hotel rooms in Cartagena, Colombia, while on assignment to protect President Obama and that a dispute ensued with one of the women over payment the following morning.[89]

After the incident was publicized, the Secret Service implemented new rules for its personnel.[90][91][92][93] The rules prohibit personnel from visiting "non-reputable establishments"[91] and from consuming alcohol less than ten hours before starting work. Additionally, they restrict who is allowed in hotel rooms.[91]

In 2015, two inebriated senior Secret Service agents drove an official car into the White House complex and collided with a barrier. One of the congressmen in the United States House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform that investigated that incident was Jason Chaffetz. In September 2015, it was revealed that 18 Secret Service employees or supervisors, including Assistant Director Ed Lowery, accessed an unsuccessful 2003 application by Chaffetz for employment with the agency and discussed leaking the information to the media in retaliation for Chaffetz' investigations of agency misconduct. The confidential personal information was later leaked to The Daily Beast. Agency Director Joe Clancy apologized to Chaffetz and said that disciplinary action would be taken against those responsible.[94]

In March 2017, a member of Vice President Mike Pence's detail was suspended after the agent was caught visiting a prostitute at a hotel in Maryland.[95]

In July 2022, during President Biden's trip to the Middle East, a Secret Service agent was sent back to the United States from Israel after assaulting a woman at a bar in Machane Yehuda. A Secret Service spokesman said in a statement that the agency was informed of the encounter, and the agent, who was working in Israel, was "briefly detained and questioned by Israeli police, who released him without charges."[96]

On July 15, 2022, The Intercept reported that a letter from the Department of Homeland Security revealed the Secret Service had erased text messages from the day before and day of the January 6 insurrection, shortly after those messages were requested by oversight officials investigating the agency’s response to the US Capitol riots.[97] The agency claimed that the messages “were erased as part of a device-replacement program,” although the agency is bound by regulation to preserve all records of its activity (including text messages, emails, and other electronic communications). According to Politico on July 19, 2022, as new material becomes available to the United States House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack, "a potential second round of hearings gets slated for the fall [of 2022]".[98] Such related new materials may include further details regarding “the potential unauthorized deletion” of text messages, particularly those from around January 5 and 6, 2021, by the Secret Service, then headed by Director James M. Murray, an appointee by then-President Trump in 2019.[99][100] The Department of Homeland Security’s inspector general has initiated a criminal investigation into the erasure of text messages exchanged by Secret Service agents relating to the January 6 Capitol riot.[101][102]

Other U.S. federal law enforcement agencies Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

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Bibliography Edit

  • Hammond, John Hays (1935). The Autobiography of John Hays Hammond. New York: Farrar & Rinehart. ISBN 978-0-405-05913-1.
  • Harris, Charles H. III; Sadler, Louis R. (2009). The Secret War in El Paso: Mexican Revolutionary Intrigue, 1906–1920. Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-4652-0.

Further reading Edit

  • Emmett, Dan (2014). Within Arm's Length: A Secret Service Agent's Definitive Inside Account of Protecting the President (First ed.). New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9781250044716.
  • Kessler, Ronald (2010). In the President's Secret Service: Behind the Scenes with Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents They Protect (1st paperback ed.). New York: Three Rivers Press. ISBN 9780307461360.
  • Kessler, Ronald (2015). The First Family Detail: Secret Service Agents Reveal the Hidden Lives of the Presidents (1st paperback ed.). New York: Crown Forum. ISBN 978-0804139618.
  • Roberts, Marcia (1991). Looking Back and Seeing the Future: The United States Secret Service, 1865–1990. Association of Former Agents of the United States Secret Service.

External links Edit

  • Official website  
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived March 1, 2000)
  • "Protecting the U.S. President abroad", by BBC News
  • —slide show by Life

united, states, secret, service, usss, redirects, here, airport, koltsovo, international, airport, usss, secret, service, federal, enforcement, agency, under, department, homeland, security, charged, with, conducting, criminal, investigations, protecting, poli. USSS redirects here For the airport see Koltsovo International Airport The United States Secret Service USSS or Secret Service is a federal law enforcement agency under the Department of Homeland Security charged with conducting criminal investigations and protecting U S political leaders their families and visiting heads of state or government 3 Until 2003 the Secret Service was part of the Department of the Treasury as the agency was founded in 1865 to combat the then widespread counterfeiting of U S currency 4 President Abraham Lincoln signed the legislation on April 14 1865 just a few hours before he was assassinated 5 In 1901 the Secret Service was also assigned to presidential protection duties 6 United States Secret ServiceU S Secret Service emblemSecret Service special agent badgeU S Secret Service flagCommon nameSecret ServiceAbbreviationUSSSAgency overviewFormedJuly 5 1865 158 years ago 1865 07 05 Employees7 000 2019 1 Annual budgetUS 2 23 billion 2019 1 Operational structureHeadquartersWashington D C U S Agency executivesKimberly Cheatle Director 2 Faron K Paramore Deputy DirectorParent agencyU S Department of Homeland Security 2003 present U S Department of the Treasury 1865 2003 FacilitiesField and resident offices116Overseas offices20Websitewww wbr secretservice wbr gov Contents 1 Primary missions 1 1 Protective mission 1 2 Investigative mission 1 3 Dual objective 2 History 2 1 Early years 2 2 20th century 2 2 1 Taft Mexican Summit 1909 2 2 2 1920s 2 2 3 1940s 2 2 4 1950s 2 2 5 1960s 2 2 6 1980s 2 2 7 1990s 2 3 21st century 2 3 1 2000s 2 3 1 1 September 11 attacks 2 3 1 2 Domestic expansion 2 3 1 3 International expansion 2 3 2 2010s 2 3 3 2020s 3 Attacks on presidents 4 Significant investigations 5 Personnel 5 1 Special Agent 5 2 Uniformed Division Officer 6 Weapons and equipment 6 1 Weapons 6 1 1 Sidearms 6 2 Badges 6 3 Attire 6 4 Vehicles 7 Field offices 8 Misconduct 9 Other U S federal law enforcement agencies 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksPrimary missions EditThe Secret Service is mandated by Congress with two distinct and critical national security missions protecting the nation s leaders and safeguarding the financial and critical infrastructure of the United States Protective mission Edit The Secret Service is tasked with ensuring the safety of the President of the United States the Vice President of the United States the President elect of the United States the Vice President elect of the United States and their immediate families former presidents their spouses and their minor children under the age of 16 those in the presidential line of succession major presidential and vice presidential candidates and their spouses and visiting foreign heads of state and heads of government By custom it also provides protection to the Secretary of the Treasury and Secretary of Homeland Security as well as other persons as directed by the president usually the White House Chief of Staff and National Security Advisor among others By federal statute the president and vice president may not refuse this protection 7 The Secret Service also provides physical security for the White House Complex the neighboring Treasury Department building the vice president s residence the principal private residences of the president vice president and former presidents and all foreign diplomatic missions in Washington D C The protective mission includes protective operations to coordinate manpower and logistics with state and local law enforcement in the US protective advances to conduct site and venue assessments for protectees and protective intelligence to investigate all manners of threats made against protectees The Secret Service is the lead agency in charge of the planning coordination and implementation of security operations for events designated as National Special Security Events NSSE As part of the service s mission of preventing an incident before it occurs the agency relies on meticulous advance work and threat assessments developed by its Intelligence Division to identify potential risks to protectees 8 Investigative mission Edit The Secret Service is tasked with safeguarding the payment and financial systems of the United States from a wide range of financial and cyber based crimes Financial investigations include counterfeit U S currency bank and financial institution fraud mail fraud wire fraud illicit financing operations and major conspiracies Cyber investigations include cybercrime network intrusions identity theft access device fraud credit card fraud and intellectual property crimes The Secret Service is also a member of the FBI s Joint Terrorism Task Force JTTF which investigates and combats terrorism on a national and international scale Also the Secret Service investigates missing and exploited children and is a partner of the National Center for Missing amp Exploited Children NCMEC 9 The Secret Service s initial responsibility was to investigate the counterfeiting of U S currency which was rampant following the American Civil War The agency then evolved into the United States first domestic intelligence and counterintelligence agency Many of the agency s missions were later taken over by subsequent agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Central Intelligence Agency CIA Drug Enforcement Administration DEA Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives ATF and IRS Criminal Investigation Division IRS CI Dual objective Edit nbsp Secret Service agents conducting electronic investigationsThe Secret Service combines the two responsibilities into a dual objective The two core missions of protection and investigation synergize with each other providing benefits to special agents during the course of their careers Skills developed during the course of investigations which are also used in an agent s protective duties include but are not limited to Partnerships that are created between field offices and local law enforcement during the course of investigations being used to gather both protective intelligence and in coordinating protection events Tactical operation e g surveillance arrests and search warrants and law enforcement writing e g affidavits after action reports and operations plans skills being applied to both investigative and protective duties Proficiency in analyzing handwriting and forgery techniques being applied in protective investigations of handwritten letters and suspicious package threats Expertise in investigating electronic and financial crimes being applied in protective investigations of threats made against the nation s leaders on the Internet Protection of the nation s highest elected leaders and other government officials is one of the primary missions of the Secret Service After the 1901 assassination of President William McKinley Congress also directed the Secret Service to protect the president of the United States The Secret Service investigates thousands of incidents each year of individuals threatening the president of the United States The Secret Service is authorized by 18 U S C 3056 a to protect 10 The president vice president or the next individual in the order of succession should the vice presidency be vacant president elect and vice president elect The immediate families of the above individuals Former presidents and their spouses for their lifetimes except if the spouse remarries Children of former presidents under the age of 16 Visiting heads of state or government and their spouses traveling with them Other distinguished foreign visitors to the United States and official representatives of the United States performing special missions abroad when the president directs protection be provided Major presidential and vice presidential candidates and within 120 days of a general presidential election their spouses Former vice presidents their spouses and their children under 16 years of age for up to 6 months from the date the former vice president leaves office the Secretary of Homeland Security can authorize temporary protection of these individuals at any time after that period In addition to the above the Secret Service can also protect other individuals by executive order of the president 11 Under Presidential Policy Directive 22 National Special Security Events the Secret Service is the lead agency for the design and implementation of operational security plans for events designated a NSSE by the secretary of homeland security nbsp Sign at the Obama family home in 2021 stating the area is protected by the Secret ServiceThere have been changes to the protection of former presidents over time Under the original Former Presidents Act former presidents and their spouses were entitled to lifetime protection subject to limited exceptions In 1994 this was amended to reduce the protection period to 10 years after a former president left office starting with presidents assuming the role after January 1 1997 On January 10 2013 President Barack Obama signed legislation reversing this limit and reinstating lifetime protection to all former presidents 12 This change impacted Presidents Obama and G W Bush as well as all future presidents 13 Protection of government officials is not solely the responsibility of the Secret Service with many other agencies such as the United States Capitol Police Supreme Court Police and Diplomatic Security Service providing personal protective services to domestic and foreign officials However while these agencies are nominally responsible for services to other officers of the United States and senior dignitaries the Secret Service provides protective services at the highest level i e for heads of state and heads of government The Secret Service s other primary mission is investigative to protect the payment and financial systems of the United States from a wide range of financial and electronic based crimes including counterfeit U S currency bank and financial institution fraud illicit financing operations cybercrime identity theft intellectual property crimes and any other violations that may affect the United States economy and financial systems The agency s key focus is on large high dollar economic impact cases involving organized criminal groups Financial criminals include embezzling bank employees armed robbers at automatic teller machines heroin traffickers and criminal organizations that commit bank fraud on a global scale The USSS plays a leading role in facilitating relationships between other law enforcement entities the private sector and academia The service maintains the Electronic Crimes Task Forces which focus on identifying and locating international cyber criminals connected to cyber intrusions bank fraud data breaches and other computer related crimes Additionally the Secret Service runs the National Computer Forensics Institute NCFI which provides law enforcement officers prosecutors and judges with cyber training and information to combat cybercrime In the face of budget pressure hiring challenges and some high profile lapses in its protective service role in 2014 the Brookings Institution and some members of Congress are asking whether the agency s focus should shift more to the protective mission leaving more of its original mission to other agencies 14 15 History EditEarly years Edit nbsp Logo of the United States Secret ServiceWith a reported one third of the currency in circulation being counterfeit at the time 16 Abraham Lincoln established a commission to make recommendations to remedy the problem The Secret Service was later established on July 5 1865 in Washington D C to suppress counterfeit currency Chief William P Wood was sworn in by Secretary of the Treasury Hugh McCulloch It was commissioned in Washington D C as the Secret Service Division of the Department of the Treasury with the mission of suppressing counterfeiting At the time the only other federal law enforcement agencies were the United States Customs Service the United States Park Police the U S Post Office Department s Office of Instructions and Mail Depredations now known as the United States Postal Inspection Service and the United States Marshals Service The Marshals did not have the manpower to investigate all crime under federal jurisdiction so the Secret Service began investigating a wide range of crimes from murder to bank robbery to illegal gambling 20th century Edit After the assassination of President William McKinley in 1901 Congress informally requested that the Secret Service provide presidential protection A year later the Secret Service assumed full time responsibility for presidential protection In 1902 William Craig became the first Secret Service agent to die while on duty in a road accident while riding in the presidential carriage 17 The Secret Service was the first U S domestic intelligence and counterintelligence agency Domestic intelligence collection and counterintelligence responsibilities were later vested in the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI upon the FBI s creation in 1908 Taft Mexican Summit 1909 Edit In 1909 President William H Taft agreed to meet with Mexican president Porfirio Diaz in El Paso Texas and Ciudad Juarez Chihuahua the first meeting between a U S and a Mexican president and also the first time an American president visited Mexico 18 The historic summit resulted in serious assassination threats and other security concerns for the then small Secret Service so the Texas Rangers 4 000 U S and Mexican troops BOI agents U S Marshals and an additional 250 man private security detail led by Frederick Russell Burnham the celebrated scout were all called in by Chief John Wilkie to provide added security 19 20 On October 16 the day of the summit Burnham discovered a man holding a concealed palm pistol standing at the El Paso Chamber of Commerce building along the procession route 21 The man was captured and disarmed only a few feet from Diaz and Taft 22 1920s Edit nbsp First female operative Florence BolanThe first unofficial female special agent was Florence Bolan 23 She joined the service in 1917 24 In 1924 Bolan was promoted to operative the title preceding special agent where she performed duties such as searching female prisoners and engaging in occasional fieldwork 24 1940s Edit The Secret Service assisted in arresting Japanese American leaders and in the Japanese American internment during World War II 25 1950s Edit In 1950 President Harry S Truman was residing in Blair House while the White House across the street was undergoing renovations On November 1 1950 two Puerto Rican nationalists Oscar Collazo and Griselio Torresola approached Blair House with the intent to assassinate President Truman Collazo and Torresola opened fire on Private Leslie Coffelt and other White House Police officers Though mortally wounded by three shots from a 9 mm German Luger to his chest and abdomen Private Coffelt returned fire killing Torresola with a single shot to his head Collazo was also shot but survived his injuries and served 29 years in prison before returning to Puerto Rico in late 1979 citation needed Coffelt is the only member of the Secret Service killed while protecting a US president against an assassination attempt Special Agent Tim McCarthy stepped in front of President Ronald Reagan during the assassination attempt of March 30 1981 and took a bullet to the chest but made a full recovery 26 1960s Edit In 1968 as a result of Robert F Kennedy s assassination Congress authorized protection of major presidential and vice presidential candidates and nominees 27 In 1965 and 1968 Congress also authorized lifetime protection of the spouses of deceased presidents unless they remarry and of the children of former presidents until age 16 28 1980s Edit nbsp Secret Service analyst examining counterfeit documentsIn 1984 the US Congress passed the Comprehensive Crime Control Act which extended the Secret Service s jurisdiction over credit card fraud and computer fraud 29 1990s Edit In 1990 the Secret Service initiated Operation Sundevil which they originally intended as a sting against malicious hackers allegedly responsible for disrupting telephone services across the entire United States The operation which was later described by Bruce Sterling in his book The Hacker Crackdown affected a great number of people unrelated to hacking and led to no convictions The Secret Service however was sued and required to pay damages citation needed On March 1 1990 the Secret Service served a search warrant on Steve Jackson Games a small company in Austin Texas seizing three computers and over 300 floppy disks In the subsequent lawsuit the judge reprimanded the Secret Service calling their warrant preparation sloppy 30 In 1994 and 1995 it ran an undercover sting called Operation Cybersnare 31 The Secret Service has concurrent jurisdiction with the FBI over certain violations of federal computer crime laws They have created 24 Electronic Crimes Task Forces ECTFs across the United States These task forces are partnerships between the service federal state and local law enforcement the private sector and academia aimed at combating technology based crimes citation needed In 1998 President Bill Clinton signed Presidential Decision Directive 62 which established National Special Security Events NSSE That directive made the Secret Service responsible for security at designated events In 1999 the United States Secret Service Memorial Building was dedicated in DC granting the agency its first headquarters Prior to this the agency s different departments were based in office space around the DC area 32 21st century Edit 2000s Edit September 11 attacks Edit The New York City Field office was located at 7 World Trade Center Immediately after the World Trade Center was attacked as part of the September 11 attacks Special Agents and other New York Field office employees were among the first to respond with first aid Sixty seven Special Agents in New York City at and near the New York Field Office helped to set up triage areas and evacuate the towers One Secret Service employee Master Special Officer Craig Miller 33 died during the rescue efforts On August 20 2002 Director Brian L Stafford awarded the Director s Valor Award to employees who assisted in the rescue attempts 34 Domestic expansion Edit nbsp Secret Service Electronic Crimes Task Force ECTF nbsp Secret Service Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Task Force AFMLTF Effective March 1 2003 the Secret Service transferred from the Treasury to the newly established Department of Homeland Security 35 The USA Patriot Act signed into law by President George W Bush on October 26 2001 mandated the Secret Service to establish a nationwide network of ECTFs in addition to the one already active in New York As such this mandate expanded on the agency s first ECTF the New York Electronic Crimes Task Force formed in 1995 which brought together federal state and local law enforcement prosecutors private industry companies and academia These bodies collectively provide necessary support and resources to field investigations that meet any one of the following criteria significant economic or community impact participation of organized criminal groups involving multiple districts or transnational organizations or use of schemes involving new technology 36 37 The network prioritizes investigations that meet the following criteria Significant economic or community impact Participation of multiple district or transnational organized criminal groups Use of new technology as a means to commit crime Investigations conducted by ECTFs include crimes such as computer generated counterfeit currency bank fraud virus and worm proliferation access device fraud telecommunications fraud Internet threats computer system intrusions and cyberattacks phishing spoofing assistance with Internet related child pornography and exploitation and identity theft 38 International expansion Edit nbsp Secret Service Cyber Intelligence Center CIS On July 6 2009 the U S Secret Service expanded its fight on cybercrime by creating the first European Electronic Crime Task Force based on the successful U S domestic model through a memorandum of understanding with Italian police and postal officials Over a year later on August 9 2010 the agency expanded its European involvement by creating its second overseas ECTF in the United Kingdom 39 40 Both task forces are said to concentrate on a wide range of computer based criminal activity including Identity theft Network intrusions Other computer related crimes affecting financial and other critical infrastructures 2010s Edit As of 2010 the service had over 6 500 employees 3 200 Special Agents 1 300 Uniformed Division Officers and 2 000 technical and administrative employees 41 Special agents serve on protective details and investigate financial cyber and homeland security related crimes In September 2014 the United States Secret Service came under criticism following two high profile incidents involving intruders at the White House One such intruder entered the East Room of the White House through an unlocked door 42 2020s Edit On April 15 2020 the ICE Homeland Security Investigations unit 43 launched Operation Stolen Promise that targets COVID 19 related fraud The operation conscripted resources from various branches of law enforcement and the government including the U S Secret Service 44 About 2 trillion in the relief package known as the CARES Act were earmarked by law in March 2020 bringing unemployment benefits and loans to millions of Americans However as Secret Service spokesmen subsequently pointed out the Act also opened up opportunities for criminals to fraudulently apply for aid By the end of 2021 nearly two years into the COVID 19 pandemic the Secret Service had seized more than 1 2 billion in relief funds appropriated by fraudsters 45 On June 1 2020 during a peaceful protest outside Lafayette Square the U S Secret Service acted contrary to an operational plan and began advancing seven minutes before U S Park Police gave any dispersal warnings 46 This early deployment increased tensions between law enforcement and the protesters 46 They faced resistance and used pepper spray in response to eggs and bottles being thrown 46 Attorney General William Barr spoke with the U S Park Police operational commander seven minutes before the Secret Service began advancing and again later before President Trump visited a nearby Parish House to pose for a photo while holding a bible 46 The U S Secret Service later apologized 46 but Joseph Cuffari the Department of Homeland Security Inspector General prevented career officials from investigating the role U S Secret Service played in the Trump administration s controversial use of force to remove protesters that day 47 In August 2020 a Secret Service officer shot a man once in the chest at the corner of 17th street and Pennsylvania during one of then President Trump s press conferences The President was evacuated but returned later and told the White House press corps that the man had a gun However according to court documents the man was actually holding a comb told the officers he was armed and took a shooting stance before being shot The man is schizophrenic and was charged with simple assault of a law enforcement officer 48 49 A day before the January 6 United States Capitol attack in 2021 the Secret Service warned Capitol Police of threats of violence that Capitol Police officers could face violence at the hands of supporters of President Donald Trump 50 On January 6 Secret Service agents provided security in and around the United States Capitol as well as evacuating Vice President Mike Pence during the riot 51 Testimony in Congress indicates Pence was concerned his security detail would remove him from the Capitol stopping him from completing his duty to oversee the final count of electoral college votes At the center of the controversy surrounding the Secret Service and January 6 investigations is Anthony M Ornato who had been the head of Trump s security detail but took the unprecedented step of leaving the Secret Service to become deputy White House chief of staff and becoming a key part of Trump s effort to get reelected 52 The Secret Service assisted in the seizure of hacker forum RaidForums in 2022 53 In April 2022 four Secret Service agents one of whom was assigned to First Lady Jill Biden were placed on leave after accepting lavish gifts rent free apartments and other bribes from 2 men ultimately convicted of impersonating federal officers 54 55 On August 24 2022 President Joe Biden named Kim Cheatle an official with PepsiCo as the agency s new director Cheatle was in the Secret Service for 27 years and became the first woman to serve as assistant director of protective operations a department tasked with protecting the president and dignitaries 56 Attacks on presidents EditMain article List of United States presidential assassination attempts and plots nbsp Secret Service agents responding to the assassination attempt of Ronald Reagan by John Hinckley Jr on March 30 1981Since the 1960s presidents John F Kennedy killed Gerald Ford twice attacked but uninjured and Ronald Reagan seriously wounded have been attacked while appearing in public 57 58 Agents on scene though not injured during attacks on presidents include William Greer and Roy Kellerman One of the agents was Robert DeProspero the Special Agent In Charge SAIC of Reagan s Presidential Protective Division PPD from January 1982 to April 1985 DeProspero was deputy to Jerry Parr the SAIC of PPD during the Reagan assassination attempt on March 30 1981 59 60 nbsp Secret Service agents guard President George W Bush in 2008The Kennedy assassination spotlighted the bravery of two Secret Service agents First an agent protecting Mrs Kennedy Clint Hill was riding in the car directly behind the presidential limousine when the attack began While the shooting continued Hill leaped from the running board of the car he was riding on and jumped onto the back of the president s moving car and guided Mrs Kennedy from the trunk back into the rear seat of the car He then shielded the president and the first lady with his body until the car arrived at the hospital Rufus Youngblood was riding in the vice presidential car When the shots were fired he vaulted over the front seat and threw his body over Vice President Lyndon B Johnson 61 That evening Johnson called Secret Service Chief James J Rowley and cited Youngblood s bravery 62 63 Youngblood would later recall some of this in his memoir Twenty Years in the Secret Service The period following the Kennedy assassination was the most difficult in the modern history of the agency Press reports indicated that morale among the agents was low for months following the assassination 64 65 The agency overhauled its procedures in the wake of the Kennedy killing Training which until that time had been confined largely to on the job efforts was systematized and regularized The Reagan assassination attempt also involved several Secret Service agents particularly agent Tim McCarthy who spread his stance to protect Reagan as six bullets were being fired by the would be assassin John Hinckley Jr 66 McCarthy survived a 22 caliber round in the abdomen For his bravery McCarthy received the NCAA Award of Valor in 1982 67 Jerry Parr the agent who pushed President Reagan into the limousine and made the critical decision to divert the presidential motorcade to George Washington University Hospital instead of returning to the White House was also honored with U S Congress commendations for his actions that day 68 Significant investigations EditArrest and indictment of Max Ray Butler co founder of the Carders Market carding website Butler was indicted by a federal grand jury in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania after his September 5 2007 arrest on wire fraud and identity theft charges According to the indictment Butler hacked over the Internet into computers at financial institutions and credit card processing centers and sold the tens of thousands of credit card numbers that he acquired in the process 69 Operation Firewall In October 2004 28 suspects located across eight U S states and six countries were arrested on charges of identity theft computer fraud credit card fraud and conspiracy Nearly 30 national and foreign field offices of the U S Secret Service including the newly established national ECTFs and countless local enforcement agencies from around the globe were involved in this operation Collectively the arrested suspects trafficked in at least 1 7 million stolen credit card numbers which amounted to 4 3 million of losses to financial institutions However authorities estimated that prevented loss to the industry was in the hundreds of millions of dollars The operation which started in July 2003 and lasted for more than a year led investigators to identify three cybercriminal groups Shadowcrew Carderplanet and Darkprofits 70 From the investigation there was the arrest and indictment of Albert Gonzalez and 11 other individuals three U S citizens one from Estonia three from Ukraine two from the People s Republic of China one from Belarus and one known only by an online alias They were arrested on August 5 2008 for the theft and sale of more than 40 million credit and debit card numbers from major U S retailers including TJX Companies BJ s Wholesale Club OfficeMax Boston Market Barnes amp Noble Sports Authority Forever 21 and DSW Gonzalez the main organizer of the scheme was charged with computer fraud wire fraud access device fraud aggravated identity theft and conspiracy for his leading role in the crime 71 Personnel Edit nbsp Secret Service agents protecting President Obama and First Lady Michelle ObamaSpecial Agent Edit nbsp Secret Service agents executing a protective operationThe Secret Service special agent position is highly competitive In 2011 the service accepted less than 1 of its 15 600 special agent applicants 72 At a minimum a prospective agent must be a U S citizen possess a current valid driver s license be in excellent health and physical condition possess visual acuity no worse than 20 100 uncorrected or correctable to 20 20 in each eye and be between age 21 37 at the time of appointment 73 but eligible veterans may apply past age 37 In 2009 the Office of Personnel Management issued implementation guidance on the Isabella v Department of State court decision OPM Letter 74 Prospective agents must also qualify for a TS SCI Top Secret Sensitive Compartmented Information clearance and undergo an extensive background investigation to include in depth interviews drug screening medical diagnosis and full scope polygraph examination 73 nbsp Secret Service agent trainees at the James J Rowley Training Center RTC Special agents receive training in two locations totaling approximately 31 weeks The first phase the Criminal Investigator Training Program CITP is conducted at the U S Department of Homeland Security s Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers FLETC in Glynco Georgia lasting approximately 13 weeks The second phase the Special Agent Training Course SATC is conducted at the Secret Service Academy James J Rowley Training Center JJRTC just outside Washington D C in Laurel Maryland lasting approximately 18 weeks 75 nbsp Secret Service agent trainees practice executing a search warrant A typical special agent career path depending upon performance and promotions that affect individual assignments begins with the first six to eight years on the job assigned to a field office Applicants are directed to list their office location preference during the application process and upon receiving a final job offer usually have several locations to choose from 73 After their field office experience agents are usually transferred to a protective assignment where they will stay for three to five years Following their protective assignment many agents return to a field office for the rest of their careers or opt for a headquarters based assignment located in Washington D C During their careers agents also have the opportunity to work overseas in one of the agency s international field offices This typically requires foreign language training to ensure language proficiency when working alongside the agency s foreign law enforcement counterparts 73 Special agents are hired at the GL 07 GL 09 or GS 11 grade level depending on individual qualifications and or education 73 Agents are eligible for promotion on a yearly basis from GL 07 to GL 09 to GS 11 to GS 12 to GS 13 The full performance grade level for a journeyman field agent is GS 13 which a GL 07 GL 09 or GS 11 agent may reach in as little as four three or two years respectively GS 13 agents are eligible for competitive promotion to supervisory positions which encompasses the GS 14 GS 15 and SES grade levels GS 13 agents who wish to remain as journeyman field agents will continue to advance the GS 13 step level capping at GS 13 Step 10 Special agents also receive Law Enforcement Availability Pay LEAP a type of premium overtime pay which provides them with an additional 25 bonus pay on top of their salary as agents are required to work an average workweek of 50 hours as opposed to 40 76 Therefore an agent living in the Greater New York City area NY NJ CT will earn an annual salary of 77 315 GL 07 86 226 GL 09 100 961 GS 11 121 010 GS 12 143 897 GS 13 170 043 GS 14 and 183 500 GS 15 Journeyman field agents at GS 13 Step 10 are also paid a salary of 183 500 77 Due to the nature of their work and unique among their federal law enforcement counterparts e g FBI DEA ATF ICE Secret Service agents are regularly eligible for scheduled overtime pay in addition to LEAP and enjoy a raised statutory pay cap of 212 100 per year Level II of the Executive Schedule as opposed to the standard pay cap of 183 500 per year Level IV of the Executive Schedule 78 Uniformed Division Officer Edit Main article United States Secret Service Uniformed Division nbsp Secret Service officer and his police dog as part of the Emergency Response Team ERT The Secret Service Uniformed Division is a security police similar to the U S Capitol Police or DHS Federal Protective Service and is in charge of protecting the physical White House grounds and foreign diplomatic missions in the Washington D C area Established in 1922 as the White House Police this organization was fully integrated into the Secret Service in 1930 In 1970 the protection of foreign diplomatic missions was added to the force s responsibilities and its name was changed to the Executive Protective Service The name United States Secret Service Uniformed Division was adopted in 1977 Secret Service Uniformed Division officers provide protection for the White House Complex the vice president s residence the main Treasury Building and Annex and foreign diplomatic missions and embassies in the Washington D C area Additionally Uniformed Division officers travel in support of presidential vice presidential and foreign head of state government missions 79 Officers may as their careers progress be selected to participate in one of several specialized units including the Canine Unit Performing security sweeps and responding to bomb threats and suspicious packages Emergency Response Team Providing a coordinated tactical response for the White House and other protected facilities Counter sniper Team Utilizing observation sighting equipment and high performance weapons to provide a secure environment for protectees Motorcade Support Unit Providing motorcycle tactical support for official movements of motorcades Crime Scene Search Unit Photographing collecting and processing physical and latent evidence Office of Training Serving as firearms and classroom instructors or recruiters Special Operations Section Handling special duties and functions at the White House Complex including conducting the daily congressional and public tours of the White House 79 Weapons and equipment Edit nbsp Two snipers protect Vice President Mike Pence in Indianapolis in 2017 Since the agency s inception a variety of weapons have been carried by its agents Weapons Edit Agents and officers are trained on standard shoulder weapons that include the FN P90 submachine gun the 9mm Heckler amp Koch MP5 submachine gun and the 12 gauge Remington 870 shotgun 80 nbsp Secret Service counter sniper marksman on top of the White House s roof armed with a sniper rifleAs a non lethal option Special Agents Special Officers and Uniformed Division Officers are armed with the ASP 16 expandable baton and Uniformed Division officers also carry pepper spray Special Operations Division SOD units are authorized to use a variety of non standard weapons The Counter Assault Team CAT and the Emergency Response Team ERT both use the 5 56mm Knight s Armament Company SR 16 CQB assault rifle in an 11 5 configuration CAT also deploys 12 gauge Remington 870 MCS breaching shotguns Uniform Division technicians assigned to the Counter Sniper CS team use custom built 300 Winchester Magnum chambered bolt action rifles referred to as JARs Just Another Rifle citation needed These rifles are built with Remington 700 long actions in Accuracy International stocks and use Schmidt amp Bender optics CS technicians also use the 7 62mm KAC SR 25 Mk11 Mod 0 semi automatic sniper rifle with a Trijicon 5 5 ACOG optic 81 Sidearms Edit The Secret Service s current duty sidearm the SIG Sauer P229 double action single action pistol chambered 357 SIG entered service in 1999 It is the issued handgun to all special agents as well as officers of the Uniformed Division As of 2019 the SIG Sauer P229 is scheduled to be replaced with Glock 9mm pistols 82 Most special agents will be issued the Glock 19 Gen 5 MOS with forward slide serrations Ameriglo Bold night sights and a Streamlight TLR 7A weapon light 83 US Secret Service s Special Operations will be issued the Glock 47 with Ameriglo Bold sights and a Surefire X300 Ultra weapon light 84 85 Badges Edit nbsp Secret Service badge 1875 1890 nbsp Secret Service badge 1890 1971 nbsp Secret Service badge 1971 2003 nbsp Secret Service badge 2003 present Attire Edit nbsp Secret Service agent in business suit working President Obama s protection detailSpecial agents and special officers of the Secret Service wear attire that is appropriate for their surroundings in order to blend in as much as possible In most circumstances the attire of a close protection shift is a conservative suit but it can range from a tuxedo to casual clothing as required by the environment Stereotypically Secret Service agents are often portrayed wearing reflective sunglasses and a communication earpiece Often their attire is customized to conceal the wide array of equipment worn in service Agents wear a distinctive lapel pin that identifies them to other agents 86 The attire for Uniformed Division Officers includes standard police uniforms or utility uniforms and ballistic identification vests for members of the counter sniper team Emergency Response Team ERT and canine officers The shoulder patch of the Uniformed Division consists of the U S coat of arms on white or black depending on the garment Also the shoulder patch is embroidered with U S Secret Service Uniformed Division Police around the emblem 87 Vehicles Edit nbsp Ford Taurus of the Uniformed Division of the Secret Service nbsp An Allegheny County Police officer and his working dog screening a US Secret Service vehicle for explosives When transporting the president in a motorcade the Secret Service uses a fleet of custom built armored Cadillac Limousines the newest and largest version of which is known as The Beast Armored Chevrolet Suburbans are also used when logistics require such a vehicle or when a more low profile appearance is required For official movement the limousine is affixed with U S and presidential flags and the presidential seal on the rear doors For unofficial events the vehicles are left sterile and unadorned 34 Field offices Edit nbsp Secret Service Field OfficesMain article List of United States Secret Service field offices The Secret Service has agents assigned to 136 field offices and field agencies and the headquarters in Washington D C The service s offices are located in cities throughout the United States and the world The offices in Lyon and The Hague are respectively responsible for liaison with the headquarters of Interpol and Europol located in those cities 88 Misconduct EditSee also 6th Summit of the Americas U S security misconduct On April 14 2012 the U S Secret Service placed 11 agents on administrative leave as the agency investigated allegations that the men brought prostitutes to their hotel rooms in Cartagena Colombia while on assignment to protect President Obama and that a dispute ensued with one of the women over payment the following morning 89 After the incident was publicized the Secret Service implemented new rules for its personnel 90 91 92 93 The rules prohibit personnel from visiting non reputable establishments 91 and from consuming alcohol less than ten hours before starting work Additionally they restrict who is allowed in hotel rooms 91 In 2015 two inebriated senior Secret Service agents drove an official car into the White House complex and collided with a barrier One of the congressmen in the United States House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform that investigated that incident was Jason Chaffetz In September 2015 it was revealed that 18 Secret Service employees or supervisors including Assistant Director Ed Lowery accessed an unsuccessful 2003 application by Chaffetz for employment with the agency and discussed leaking the information to the media in retaliation for Chaffetz investigations of agency misconduct The confidential personal information was later leaked to The Daily Beast Agency Director Joe Clancy apologized to Chaffetz and said that disciplinary action would be taken against those responsible 94 In March 2017 a member of Vice President Mike Pence s detail was suspended after the agent was caught visiting a prostitute at a hotel in Maryland 95 In July 2022 during President Biden s trip to the Middle East a Secret Service agent was sent back to the United States from Israel after assaulting a woman at a bar in Machane Yehuda A Secret Service spokesman said in a statement that the agency was informed of the encounter and the agent who was working in Israel was briefly detained and questioned by Israeli police who released him without charges 96 On July 15 2022 The Intercept reported that a letter from the Department of Homeland Security revealed the Secret Service had erased text messages from the day before and day of the January 6 insurrection shortly after those messages were requested by oversight officials investigating the agency s response to the US Capitol riots 97 The agency claimed that the messages were erased as part of a device replacement program although the agency is bound by regulation to preserve all records of its activity including text messages emails and other electronic communications According to Politico on July 19 2022 as new material becomes available to the United States House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack a potential second round of hearings gets slated for the fall of 2022 98 Such related new materials may include further details regarding the potential unauthorized deletion of text messages particularly those from around January 5 and 6 2021 by the Secret Service then headed by Director James M Murray an appointee by then President Trump in 2019 99 100 The Department of Homeland Security s inspector general has initiated a criminal investigation into the erasure of text messages exchanged by Secret Service agents relating to the January 6 Capitol riot 101 102 Other U S federal law enforcement agencies EditMain article Federal law enforcement in the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Drug Enforcement Administration DEA Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms ATF U S Marshals Service USMS Immigration and Customs Enforcement ICE Customs and Border Protection CBP Law Enforcement in the U S Military DOD See also Edit nbsp United States portalBodyguard Commander in Chief s Guard the American Revolutionary War unit that also had the dual responsibilities of protecting the Commander in Chief and the Continental Army s money List of protective service agencies Secret Service codename Steve Jackson Games Inc v United States Secret Service Title 31 of the Code of Federal RegulationsReferences Edit a b DHS Secret Service FY 2019 2nd Budget PDF dhs gov Archived PDF from the original on February 6 2019 Retrieved February 13 2019 Leadership secretservice gov Archived from the original on March 10 2017 Retrieved March 22 2017 Resse Shawn April 16 2012 The U S Secret Service An Examination and Analysis of Its Evolving Missions PDF Congressional Research Service Archived PDF from the original on April 18 2012 Retrieved April 18 2012 Secret Service Fast Facts CNN May 3 2019 Archived from the original on May 31 2019 Retrieved June 3 2019 The United States Secret Service clintonwhitehouse3 archives gov Retrieved August 20 2023 BBC History Revealed magazine June 2023 issue Page 55 Bauer Bob Goldsmith Jack 2020 After Trump Reconstructing the Presidency Washington DC Lawfare Press p 67 ISBN 978 1 7354806 1 9 OCLC 1198233124 United States Secret Service Protective Mission Secretservice gov Archived from the original on April 25 2018 Retrieved September 20 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain United States Secret Service Investigative Mission Secretservice gov Archived from the original on September 16 2017 Retrieved September 20 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain United States Code Title 18 Section 3056 Archived from the original on November 6 2020 Retrieved November 6 2020 Secret Service FAQs www secretservice gov Archived from the original on November 1 2020 Retrieved November 7 2020 Gillman Todd J Obama signs lifetime Secret Service protection for George W Bush himself and future presidents Trail Blazers Blog The Dallas Morning News Archived from the original on January 15 2013 Retrieved January 18 2013 Compton Ann January 10 2013 Lifetime Secret Service Protection Restored for Presidents Bush and Obama ABC News Archived from the original on September 25 2013 Retrieved September 21 2013 The Secret Service What s next for the new director Brookings Institution Brookings Archived from the original on October 27 2016 Retrieved October 26 2016 Secret Service Recruitment Campaign Amps Up wbur org Archived from the original on October 27 2016 Retrieved October 26 2016 The United States Secret Service Clinton2 nara gov July 1 1922 Archived from the original on August 2 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 Casillas Ofelia September 4 2002 Forgotten hero gets due after a century Chicago Tribune p 3 Archived from the original on June 20 2019 Retrieved May 9 2019 Harris amp Sadler 2009 pp 1 2 Harris amp Sadler 2009 p 15 Mr Taft s Peril Reported Plot to Kill Two Presidents Daily Mail London October 16 1909 ISSN 0307 7578 Hammond 1935 pp 565 566 Harris amp Sadler 2009 p 213 A history of the Secret Service CBS News July 5 2015 Retrieved April 15 2023 a b FY 2022 United States Secret Service Annual Report PDF United States Secret Service 2023 p 26 Retrieved April 15 2023 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain 11 Asian L J 147 2004 Foreword Sixty Years after the Internment Civil Rights Identity Politics and Racial Profiling Tamaki Donald K Chief of Police Village of Orland Park Retrieved February 27 2021 Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 90 331 Public Law 90 608 October 21 1968 Page 1198 PDF United States Government Publishing Office October 21 1968 Archived PDF from the original on June 3 2019 Retrieved June 3 2019 Doyle Charles October 15 2014 Cybercrime An Overview of the Federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Statute and Related Federal Criminal Laws PDF Congressional Research Service Archived PDF from the original on November 27 2019 Retrieved December 2 2019 Steve Jackson Games Inc v United States Secret Service 816 F Supp 432 437 W D Tex 1993 Wireless Industry Salutes U S Secret Service Ctia org September 11 1995 Archived from the original on March 23 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 History secretservice gov Archived from the original on June 27 2017 Retrieved May 14 2017 Master Special Officer Craig J Miller ODMP org The Officer Down Memorial Page Inc Archived from the original on November 5 2013 Retrieved August 12 2013 a b Kessler Ronald 2009 In the President s Secret Service Behind the Scenes with Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents They Protect Crown Publishing Group ISBN 9780307461353 History secretservice gov Archived from the original on June 27 2017 Retrieved January 27 2019 United States Secret Service Electronic Crimes Task Forces and Working Groups Secretservice gov October 26 2001 Archived from the original on August 6 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 About the U S Secret Service Electronic Crimes Task Forces Secretservice gov Archived from the original on August 18 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 United States Secret Service Electronic Crimes Task Forces PDF US Department of Homeland Security Archived from the original PDF on August 29 2017 Retrieved September 24 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain United States Secret Service Signs Partnership Agreement With Italian Officials Establishing the First European Electronic Crimes Task Force PDF Press release July 6 2009 Archived from the original PDF on September 15 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 United States Secret Service Signs Partnership Agreement With United Kingdom Officials Establishing the Second European Electronic Crimes Task Force PDF Press release August 9 2010 Archived from the original PDF on September 15 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 United States Secret Service Frequently Asked Questions SecretService gov January 1 1997 Archived from the original on March 23 2010 Retrieved August 9 2012 Henry Ed September 30 2014 House intruder entered East Room used unlocked door FOX News Associated Press Archived from the original on September 30 2014 Retrieved September 30 2014 Homeland Security Investigations Overview U S Immigration and Customs Enforcement Retrieved December 21 2021 DHS is Taking on COVID 19 Related Fraud Homeland Security April 24 2020 Retrieved December 21 2021 Lyngaas Sean December 21 2021 Secret Service accelerates crackdown on Covid 19 scams CNN Retrieved December 21 2021 a b c d e Review of U S Park Police Actions at Lafayette Park PDF DHS Inspector General Blocked Investigation into Secret Service s Role in Clearing Protesters from Lafayette Square Report Law amp Crime April 20 2021 Retrieved November 2 2022 Carega Christina Pomeroy Associated August 27 2020 Man shot by Secret Service officer outside White House was holding a black comb and suffers from mental illness court documents say CNN Retrieved October 31 2022 Courtney Pomeroy August 27 2020 Court docs Schizophrenic man shot by Secret Service outside White House had comb not gun WJLA Associated Press Retrieved October 11 2022 Secret Service warned Capitol Police about violent threats 1 day before Jan 6 POLITICO Politico August 25 2021 Trump didn t just know Pence was in danger It s way worse than that MSNBC February 13 2021 The Washington Post Jan 6 showed two identities of Secret Service Gutsy heroes vs Trump yes men July 2 2022 by Carol D Leonnig 1 United States Leads Seizure of One of the World s Largest Hacker Forums and Arrests Administrator April 12 2022 Second D C man accused of posing as a federal agent pleads guilty NBC News October 5 2022 Retrieved October 11 2022 Guns drones luxury apartments Motive of accused police posers still unclear The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved October 11 2022 Viser Matt August 24 2022 Biden names second woman to head the Secret Service The Washington Post Retrieved October 11 2022 Quijano Elaine May 10 2005 Secret Service told grenade landed near Bush CNN com Retrieved August 9 2012 Chilcote January 11 2006 Bush grenade attacker gets life CNN Archived from the original on July 4 2008 Retrieved January 3 2007 Petro Joseph Robinson Jeffrey 2005 Standing Next to History An Agent s Life Inside the Secret Service New York St Martin s Press pp 140 141 amp 202 204 ISBN 978 0 312 33221 1 Robert L DeProspero WVUAlumni West Virginia University Alumni Association 2005 Archived from the original on October 13 2007 Retrieved August 12 2013 Johnson Praises Agent s Bravery Honors Guard Who Shielded Him in Dallas Shooting Courage Is Cited The New York Times Associated Press December 5 1963 p 32 The Transfer of Power Time November 29 1963 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved June 25 2007 Johnson Says Agent in Dallas Screened Him With His Body The New York Times Associated Press November 27 1963 p 21 Youngblood Rufus 1973 Twenty Years in the Secret Service New York Simon and Schuster pp 147 149 Survivor s Guilt The Secret Service and the Failure to Protect the President Archived from the original on June 29 2007 Retrieved June 29 2007 He Took a Bullet for Reagan CBS News June 11 2004 Archived from the original on May 22 2013 Retrieved November 10 2008 In the Secret Service McCarthy continued we re trained to cover and evacuate the president And to cover the president you have to get as large as you can rather than hitting the deck By means of the NCAA Award of Valor the National Collegiate Athletic Association recognizes courageous action or noteworthy bravery by persons involved with intercollegiate athletics McCarthy had played NCAA football at the University of Illinois Wilber Del Quentin 2011 Rawhide Down The Near Assassination of Ronald Reagan Macmillan ISBN 0 8050 9346 X Secret Service Investigation Disrupts Identity Theft Ring PDF Press release September 13 2007 Archived from the original PDF on September 15 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 U S Secret Service s Operation Firewall Nets 28 Arrests PDF Press release October 28 2004 Archived from the original PDF on September 15 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 Additional Indictments Announced in Ongoing Secret Service Network Intrusion Investigation PDF Press release August 5 2008 Archived from the original PDF on September 15 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 Secret Service Agent Selection Tougher Than Harvard Bloomberg News April 25 2012 Archived from the original on September 23 2017 Retrieved September 23 2017 a b c d e Special Agent Career Path US Secret Service Archived from the original on October 11 2017 Retrieved September 24 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain CHCOC gov CHCOC gov August 26 2009 Archived from the original on August 8 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 Agent Training Archived from the original on May 12 2017 Retrieved September 23 2017 LEAP Pay Archived from the original on September 23 2017 Retrieved September 23 2017 LEAP Salary Calculator Archived from the original on December 25 2017 Retrieved September 18 2020 Secret Service Agent Overtime Pay Archived from the original on September 6 2017 Retrieved September 27 2017 a b Uniformed Division Careers Archived from the original on May 5 2017 Retrieved September 24 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Jones Richard D Jane s Infantry Weapons 2009 2010 Jane s Information Group 35th edition January 27 2009 ISBN 978 0 7106 2869 5 The Gear and Guns of the Secret Service World of Firepower Vol 4 Issue 3 May June 2016 pp 9 10 ASIN B01GK8XJEY Francescani Chis August 1 2019 US Secret Service switching to 9mm Glock pistols ABC News Archived from the original on August 2 2019 Retrieved August 1 2019 MIHALEK DONALD J August 1 2019 CONFIRMED US Secret Service Adopts Glock 19 G47 MOS Gen5 Pistols www tactical life com Retrieved December 13 2021 Eger Chris August 2 2019 U S Secret Service Reportedly Goes Glock Guns com Retrieved December 13 2021 Episkopos Mark November 27 2019 Why You Can t Buy the Glock 47 Gun Only U S Customs and Border Protection Have Them The National Interest Retrieved December 13 2021 New US Secret Service lapel pins will come with a secret security feature Quartz com November 30 2018 Archived from the original on September 27 2019 Retrieved September 26 2019 The American Presidency Americanhistory si edu March 14 2012 Archived from the original on August 19 2012 Retrieved August 9 2012 United States Secret Service Field Office Contact Details United States Secret Service Archived from the original on September 6 2014 Retrieved September 6 2014 David Nakamura April 14 2012 11 Secret Service agents put on leave amid prostitution inquiry Washington Post Secret Service amends standards of conduct after KIRO 7 investigation KIRO TV April 27 2012 Archived from the original on May 4 2012 Retrieved April 30 2012 a b c O Donnell Norah Hughes Jillian April 27 2012 New code of conduct issued for Secret Service agents CBS News Archived from the original on April 28 2012 Retrieved April 29 2012 Schmidt Michael S April 27 2012 Secret Service Tightens Travel Rules for Its Staff The New York Times Archived from the original on April 28 2012 Retrieved April 29 2012 Nakamura David O Keefe Ed April 28 2012 Secret Service imposes new rules on agents for foreign trips The Washington Post Archived from the original on April 28 2012 Retrieved April 29 2012 Caldwell Alicia A Investigation Secret Service tried to discredit US lawmaker permanent dead link Associated Press Stars and Stripes September 30 2015 Landers Elizabeth Secret Service agent on VP s detail caught after meeting with prostitute at Maryland hotel Archived April 6 2017 at the Wayback Machine April 5 2017 Secret Service agent sent back to U S from Israel after alleged physical encounter www cbsnews com July 13 2022 Retrieved July 14 2022 SECRET SERVICE DELETED JAN 6 TEXT MESSAGES AFTER OVERSIGHT OFFICIALS REQUESTED THEM www theintercept com July 14 2022 Retrieved July 14 2022 Cheney Kyle Wu Nicholas McGraw Meridith July 19 2022 Sprint through the finish Why the Jan 6 committee isn t nearly done The panel has a much anticipated hearing Thursday that is expected to feature former Trump White House press aide Sarah Matthews and former deputy national security adviser Matthew Pottinger But that won t be the end Politico Retrieved July 20 2022 Leonnig Carol D Sacchetti Maria July 19 2022 Secret Service cannot recover texts no new details for Jan 6 committee The Washington Post Retrieved July 20 2022 Leonnig Carol D Sacchetti Maria July 20 2022 Secret Service watchdog knew in February that texts had been purged The Washington Post Retrieved July 21 2022 Forbes Secret Service Under Criminal Investigation For Deleting Jan 6 Texts July 21 2022 2 The Editorial Board July 23 2022 The Secret Service texting scandal demands answers The Washington Post Retrieved July 23 2022 Bibliography EditHammond John Hays 1935 The Autobiography of John Hays Hammond New York Farrar amp Rinehart ISBN 978 0 405 05913 1 Harris Charles H III Sadler Louis R 2009 The Secret War in El Paso Mexican Revolutionary Intrigue 1906 1920 Albuquerque NM University of New Mexico Press ISBN 978 0 8263 4652 0 Further reading EditEmmett Dan 2014 Within Arm s Length A Secret Service Agent s Definitive Inside Account of Protecting the President First ed New York St Martin s Press ISBN 9781250044716 Kessler Ronald 2010 In the President s Secret Service Behind the Scenes with Agents in the Line of Fire and the Presidents They Protect 1st paperback ed New York Three Rivers Press ISBN 9780307461360 Kessler Ronald 2015 The First Family Detail Secret Service Agents Reveal the Hidden Lives of the Presidents 1st paperback ed New York Crown Forum ISBN 978 0804139618 Roberts Marcia 1991 Looking Back and Seeing the Future The United States Secret Service 1865 1990 Association of Former Agents of the United States Secret Service External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States Secret Service Official website nbsp United States Secret Service at the Wayback Machine archived March 1 2000 Protecting the U S President abroad by BBC News Inside the Secret Service slide show by Life Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States Secret Service amp oldid 1177550557, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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