Secret Service director touts changes as Congress presses him on Trump
assassination attempt
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[December 06, 2024]
By REBECCA SANTANA
WASHINGTON (AP) — The acting director of the Secret Service said
Thursday that the agency is “reorganizing and reimagining” its culture
and how it operates following an assassination attempt against Donald
Trump on the campaign trail.
Members of a bipartisan House task force investigating the attempt on
Trump's life pushed Ronald Rowe on how the agency’s staffers could have
missed such blatant security vulnerabilities leading up to the July 13
shooting at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. At one point, the hearing
devolved into a shouting match between Rowe and a Republican
congressman.
Rowe promised accountability for what he called the agency’s “abject
failure” to secure the rally in Butler, where a gunman opened fire from
a nearby building. Trump was wounded in the ear, one rallygoer was
killed and two others were wounded.
Another assassination attempt two months later contributed to the
agency’s troubles. That gunman waited for hours for Trump to appear at
his golf course in Florida, but a Secret Service agent thwarted the
attack by spotting the firearm poking through bushes.
The task force has been investigating both attempts, but it was the July
shooting that dominated Thursday’s hearing. Its inquiry is one of a
series of investigations and reports that have faulted the agency for
planning and communications failures. The agency’s previous director
resigned, and the Secret Service increased protections for Trump before
the Republican won the November election.
Rowe was repeatedly asked by flabbergasted lawmakers how problems so
obvious in hindsight were allowed to happen.
Rep. Jason Crow, a Colorado Democrat, said it was “just wild to me” that
at a time of tech advances, the Secret Service was using text messages
and emails to communicate in real time about threats.
He also asked Rowe why so many things went wrong that day “yet nobody
said anything.”
Rowe said the agency used to have a culture where people felt
comfortable speaking up.
“I don’t know where we lost that,” he said. “We have to get back to
that.”
Rowe said the agency is putting a much stronger emphasis on training —
something previous investigations found was lacking — and on doing more
regular reviews of events to see what went right and where improvements
can be made.
“We are reorganizing and reimaging this organization," Rowe told
lawmakers. He said the agency needs to identify possible leaders much
earlier in their careers instead of just promoting people to command
positions because they have been around a long time.
The hearing was largely cordial, with members of Congress stressing the
bipartisan nature of their work and praising Rowe for cooperating with
their investigation even as they pushed him for explanations.
But at one point, Rowe and Rep. Pat Fallon, a Texas Republican, faced
off — shouting over each other as other members pleaded for order.
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Secret Service Acting Director Ronald L. Rowe Jr. responds to
questions from Rep. Pat Fallon, R-Texas, during a hearing by the
House Task Force on the Attempted Assassination of Donald J. Trump
on the Secret Service's security failures regarding the
assassination attempts on President-elect Trump, in Butler, Pa. on
July 13, 2024, and West Palm Beach, Fla. on Sept. 15, 2024, on
Capitol Hill, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Rod
Lamkey, Jr.)
Fallon pulled out a photo of President Joe Biden, Trump and others
at this year's Sept. 11 ceremony in New York and asked Rowe why he
was at the event, suggesting it was to burnish his prospects at
getting the director job permanently. Trump has not yet named his
pick to lead the agency.
“I was there to show respect for a Secret Service member that died
on 9/11. Do not invoke 9/11 for political purposes!” Rowe shouted.
“You wanted to be visible because you were auditioning for this job
that you’re not going to get!” Fallon later shot back.
Rowe roared back: "You are out of line, Congressman. You are out of
line!”
“You're a bully,” Fallon said.
This was the task force’s second public hearing and the first time
that Rowe has addressed its members in public. The panel has until
Dec. 13 to release its final report.
Rep. Mark Green, a Tennessee Republican, said the agency’s conduct
during the July shooting seemed almost “lackadaisical.” He said some
of the issues that went wrong that day were ”really basic things.”
“It speaks of an apathy or a complacency that is really unacceptable
in an organization like the Secret Service,” Green said.
The task force conducted 46 transcribed interviews, attended over a
dozen briefings and reviewed over 20,000 documents. Members also
visited the site of both assassination attempts and went to the
FBI’s laboratory in Quantico, Virginia, to look at evidence.
Rowe said Thursday that the agency's internal investigation, whose
findings were released last month, identified failures by multiple
employees. He noted that the quality of the advance work — the
people who scope out event locations ahead of time — did not meet
agency standards. He vowed accountability for those who fell down on
the job.
Many of the investigations have centered on why buildings near the
rally with a clear line of sight to the stage where Trump was
speaking were not secured in advance. The gunman, Thomas Crooks,
climbed onto the roof of one of them and opened fire before being
killed by a Secret Service counter-sniper.
Rowe pointed to the failure to protect the building as the most
glaring oversight that day.
He also was asked about the morale of agents and new hires. Rowe
said applications are actually up this year — the agency made a net
gain of about 200 agents during the past fiscal year, meaning both
new agents were hired and veteran agents retained.
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