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Shop NowSenator Josh Hawley is perturbed with the Secret Service. Despite assurances from the new director, Ronald Rowe, that his department will fully cooperate with ongoing investigations, they’re back to playing hide the ball. His top officials are deliberately concealing things from federal auditors. Embarrassing things.
Secret Service obstruction
Officials of the U.S. Secret Service “have kept federal auditors from Donald Trump’s campaign events.” They’re trying to hide “that the former president is not receiving a consistent level of protective assets.”
He only gets proper protection when someone is looking over their shoulder. Missouri Republican Senator Josh Hawley has a new whistleblower.
On Tuesday, October 8, Senator Hawley blazed off a scathing letter to the acting director of the Secret Service. Ronald Rowe may only be acting like a director but he uses the same shady tricks. Promise transparency then hide the dirt.
Hawley hits him between the eyes with an assault hammer by asking point blank “whether the protective agency was impeding an internal investigation.” That’s one of those loaded questions he already knows the answer to. He has good reason to believe that they are.
Somebody is lying and it better not be Rowe. “The whistleblower alleges that the Secret Service denied access to auditors because the former president is not receiving the full level of protective assets for all of his events.”
A lot of people are calling the attempted assassination on July 13 an “inside job.”

Obscure or conceal
Not only is someone hiding facts from DHS auditors, “Secret Service leadership wants to obscure or simply conceal this fact.” Everyone knows by now that the Inspectors General are a pack of toothless watchdogs.
The one for DHS, Joseph Cuffari, is an exceptionally old and slow moving one, who wags his tail at burglars. Hawley found out he’s been tossed a few bones as distraction.
According to what the whistleblower had to say, “auditors with the DHS Office of Inspector General have only been allowed to investigate ‘select events,‘ including a recent Trump rally in Wilmington, North Carolina.”
That one was staffed by the entire Secret Service “A” team, all polished up and on their best behavior. Hawley wrote a separate letter to Cuffari.
He wanted Cuffari to know two things. First that he’s being played like a violin and second that since he’s now aware of it he better do something about it. Your auditors probably didn’t know this but… Hawley began. They had only observed the “best” Presidential Protection Division agents the Secret Service has to offer there.
“As you continue to audit the agency’s programs and activities, you should be aware of these allegations, which indicate that the Secret Service is not in fact cooperating with your auditors and is instead painting a false picture.” Cuffari, left on his own, is likely to suggest a “happy little cloud” or two, to complete the illusion.