Washington (CNN) -- Julia Pierson, the first female director of the Secret
Service, resigned Wednesday in the aftermath of a fence-jumper gaining access
to the White House on September 19 and a subsequent congressional inquiry
uncovering other security lapses.
Homeland
Security Director Jeh Johnson announced the resignation in a statement. He also
announced that the Department of Homeland Security would take over an internal
inquiry of the Secret Service and that he would appoint of a new panel to
review security at the White House.
Joseph
Clancy, formerly a special agent in charge of the Presidential Protective
Division of the Secret Service, was named interim director, Johnson said in his
statement.
Calls
for Pierson to leave her post grew after a poor performance during her
testimony Tuesday on Capitol Hill and another bombshell revelation the same day
that an
armed security contractor was allowed to get into an elevator with the
President during a recent trip to the Centers for Disease Control in
Atlanta.
Even
some high-ranking Democrats had turned against Pierson, who was in the job for
less than two years. In an interview on Wednesday, Rep. Elijah Cummings, the
top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, where Tuesday's hearing took
place, said he thought Pierson -- who he referred to as "this lady"
-- "has to go."
The
Maryland congressman reiterated this stance in an interview with CNN's Wolf
Blitzer. "I want her to go if she cannot restore trust in the agency and
if she cannot get the culture back in order," he said.
And
New York's Chuck Schumer, the third-ranking Democrat in the Senate, had
announced he would call for Pierson's resignation on Wednesday as well, though
that was later canceled.
Republicans
also had called for Pierson to step down.
"It's
clear to me that the only way to solve the problem the Secret Service has is
with new leadership," Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said.
"What Julia Pierson describes as mistakes are major security failures on
multiple fronts."
Graham
said light security around Obama is "the worst possible signal to send to
terrorists and our enemies around the world."
After
news of her resignation broke, lawmakers praised her decision to step down.
"The
agency tasked with protecting the highest office in our land should be the
crown jewel of federal law enforcement," Rep. Jason Chaffetz, who sits on
the Oversight Committee, said in a statement Wednesday afternoon. "I will
work with my colleagues and the Administration towards returning the agency
back to the standards the President deserves."
News
of Pierson's resignation came as new information about the fence-jumper came to
light.
Omar
Gonzalez, 42, pleaded not guilty to federal and District of Columbia charges
on Wednesday. A federal judge in Washington ordered additional mental testing on
the 42-year-old Iraq war veteran to determine whether he is competent to stand
trial.
Meanwhile,
the inquiry continues into how the Army veteran launched over the fence and was
able to sprint up to the front door, burst into the White House and run into
the ornate East Room.
Neither
President Barack Obama nor the first family were at home at the time of the
incident.
But
a Secret Service source told CNN there is an elaborate closed-circuit video
system, and that video is being dissected to establish new protocols.
When
Gonzalez burst through the White House door, he pushed a female officer to the
side.
But
the source said, "Gender was not a factor, she got one door secured but
was pushed over while trying to get second door shut."
An
alarm box had been turned down near the front door after complaints by the
White House usher's office that it was too loud.
A
canine unit was not released to chase Gonzalez, said the source, because there
were "too many friendlies around."
Pierson
was named the director of the U.S. Secret Service in March 2013, tapped by
Obama to change the culture of an agency that was then marred by a Colombian
prostitution scandal.
Several
male agents in an advance contingent before a presidential trip to Cartagena,
Colombia, had taken prostitutes back to their hotel rooms, according to
investigations after the trip. A morning-after dispute between one agent and a
woman over payment led to exposure of what happened and the ensuing
investigations. Nine agents eventually left or lost their jobs
Pierson
became the Secret Service's chief of staff in 2008. Before that, she served on
the protective details of Presidents George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George
W. Bush. She had been the assistant director of the agnecy's Office of Human
Resources and Training, and held the title of deputy assistant director in the
Office of Protective Operations and the Office of Administration.
Pierson
started her career in law enforcement as a police officer in Orlando, Florida.
She joined the Secret Service in 1984, working in the Miami and Orlando field
offices.
Johnson
made sure to praise the overall work of the Secret Service when he announced
Pierson's resignation.
"It
is worth repeating that the Secret Service is one of the finest official
protection services in the world, consisting of men and women who are highly
trained and skilled professionals prepared to put their own lives on the line
in a second's notice for the people they protect."
http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/01/politics/secret-service-director-resigns/index.html?hpt=hp_t1
2 comments:
Was this a SETUP against Pierson? Perhaps because she was not 'one of them'? Would have been easy to instruct those on duty at the WH to stand down when this man supposedly ran through 'security' and in to the WH. Would have been easy for the 'doctors' at VA to mind control the guy and set him up to do the job for them to get rid of Pierson. How long will it take before this setup by the traitors is EXPOSED to the world????. Been around too long in this country watching these criminals play their games to miss this one.
Good thought to consider! There are just too many damn proven false flags lately to NOT at least consider everything to be false flags.....
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