Secret Service and its chief under pressure over Trump shooting
Director Kimberly Cheatle will testify on Capitol Hill on Monday amid calls for her to resign.
The Secret Service and its director, Kimberly Cheatle, remain under intense scrutiny after the assassination attempt on Donald Trump, with politicians across the spectrum questioning how a gunman could have got so close to the former president during a rally.
Ms Cheatle said in 2021 that the service “has a zero fail mission”, adding: “They have to come in every day prepared and ready with their game-face on.”
She is now facing calls to resign and will testify on Capitol Hill on Monday after Mr Trump suffered an injured ear when a gunman opened fire during a July 13 rally in Pennsylvania when he was supposed to be carefully guarded.
Mr Trump’s son, Eric Trump, said Ms Cheatle should resign in “absolute disgrace”.
“The fact that she is still in her job is beyond,” he said on Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures.
Donald Trump said he was given no indication that police had identified a suspicious person when the former president took the stage in Pennsylvania. Some rallygoers said in interviews after the attempted assassination that they saw the gunman on the roof before Mr Trump walked out onto the stage, and had alerted law enforcement authorities on site.
“They could’ve said, let’s wait for 15 minutes, 20 minutes, five minutes, something. Nobody said. I think that was a mistake.”
Mr Trump also questioned the security lapses and how the gunman was able to access the roof of the building.
“How did somebody get on that roof? And why wasn’t he reported? Because people saw that he was on the roof,” Mr Trump said. “So you would’ve thought someone would’ve done something about it.”
Local law enforcement officers had seen the man and deemed him suspicious enough to circulate his photo and witnesses reported seeing him scaling the building.
Mr Trump’s campaign and the White House did not immediately respond to emailed requests for comment.
Ms Cheatle has already described the shooting as “unacceptable”, and when asked who bears the most responsibility, she said ultimately it is the Secret Service that protects the former president.
“The buck stops with me,” Ms Cheatle told ABC News. “I am the director of the Secret Service.”
The Secret Service has now acknowledged it denied some requests by Mr Trump’s campaign for increased security at events in recent years.
In the immediate aftermath of the assassination bid, the agency denied rejecting such requests. But it acknowledged late on Saturday that it had turned back some requests to increase security around the former president.
The reversal is likely to be a key focus of the congressional hearing on Monday where Ms Cheatle is expected to appear before politicians who have been expressing anger over security lapses at the Pennsylvania rally.
The agency’s chief spokesman, Anthony Guglielmi, said in a statement released to The Washington Post on Saturday: “The Secret Service has a vast, dynamic and intricate mission. Every day we work in a dynamic threat environment to ensure our protectees are safe and secure across multiple events, travel, and other challenging environments.
“In some instances where specific Secret Service specialised units or resources were not provided, the agency made modifications to ensure the security of the protectee.
“This may include utilising state or local partners to provide specialised functions or otherwise identifying alternatives to reduce public exposure of a protectee.”
President Joe Biden appointed Ms Cheatle in August 2022 to take over an agency with a history of scandals, and she worked to bolster diverse hiring, especially of women in the male-dominated service.
The second woman to lead the Secret Service, Ms Cheatle worked her way up for 27 years before leaving in 2021 for a job as a security executive at PepsiCo. Mr Biden brought her back.
Now, she faces her most serious challenge: figuring out what went wrong with the agency’s core responsibility to protect presidents and whether she can maintain the support – or the job itself – to make changes.
Details are still unfolding about signs of trouble on the day of the assassination attempt, including the steps taken by the Secret Service and local authorities to secure a building that the shooter, Thomas Matthew Crooks, climbed within 135 metres of where Mr Trump was speaking.
An ex-fire chief at the rally, Corey Comperatore, was killed and two others were injured. Secret Service gunmen killed the attacker.
The Biden administration has directed an independent review of security at the rally. The Homeland Security Department’s inspector general has opened three investigations and congressional committees have launched others as calls mount for Ms Cheatle to resign. Two Republican senators demanding answers followed her as she walked through the Republican National Convention this past week.
“The nation deserves answers and accountability,” Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell said on social media platform X. “New leadership at the Secret Service would be an important step in that direction.”
The House Oversight and Accountability Committee has subpoenaed Ms Cheatle to appear on Monday.
After the shooting, Ms Cheatle and the female Secret Service agents who protected Mr Trump have faced scathing criticism and questions about whether Ms Cheatle lowered hiring standards. Supporters are adamant that has not happened.
“It is disrespectful to the women of the Secret Service of the Department of Homeland Security and to women law enforcement officers around the nation to imply that their gender disqualifies them from service to the nation and their communities,” said Kristie Canegallo, Homeland Security’s acting deputy secretary.
Ms Canegallo said Ms Cheatle advocated for a law passed this year that authorised overtime pay for Secret Service agents and successfully oversaw nine high-profile events such as political conventions. The agency under her watch also protected Mr Biden during his trip to Ukraine without problems, she added.
Ms Cheatle applied for the Secret Service while she was still in college. She was told to wait until she had graduated and has previously said it ultimately took a little over two years to get hired: “I was pretty persistent.”
After training, she was assigned to the Detroit office where she spent just over four years. She then transferred to Washington where she served on the Treasury secretary’s detail and protected then vice-president Dick Cheney, including on 9/11.
Other positions during her time with the agency include special agent in charge of the Atlanta field office and special agent in charge of the agency’s training facility in Maryland.
She became the first woman to be named assistant director of protective operations, the division that provides protection to the president and other dignitaries.