World

US Secret Service deleted texts from Jan 6 insurrection: watchdog

Messages may be crucial to whether Donald Trump, advisers stoked Capitol riot

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 15 Jul 2022 2:30PM

US Secret Service deleted texts from Jan 6 insurrection: watchdog
The committee investigating January 6 has sought to show that Donald Trump (pic) knowingly incited the insurrection as an attempted ‘coup’. – AFP pic, July 15, 2022

WASHINGTON – The United States Secret Service, the law enforcement agency that protects the president, deleted agents’ text messages sent during the January 6 Capitol riot, a government watchdog said in a letter published yesterday.

Joseph Cuffari, the inspector-general of the Homeland Security Department, told Congress in the letter dated yesterday that his office has had difficulties obtaining records from the Secret Service from January 5 and 6, 2021.

The messages could be crucial to the House of Representatives and Justice Department investigations into whether Donald Trump and his close advisers encouraged the deadly insurrection by the former president’s supporters at the US Capitol, which aimed to prevent the certification of Democratic rival Joe Biden as the winner of the November 2020 election.

Secret Service agents were with Trump during the day of the uprising, and were also with vice-president Mike Pence, who went into hiding at the Capitol after pro-Trump rioters called for him to be hanged.

On June 29 a former White House staffer told the House January 6 investigation that Trump had attempted to force the Secret Service to take him to the Capitol to join his supporters on that day. 

“The department notified us that many US Secret Service (USSS) text messages, from January 5 and 6, 2021, were erased as part of a device replacement programme,” Cuffari wrote in the letter first reported by The Intercept and later published by Politico.

“The USSS erased those text messages after the OIG requested records of electronic communications” for a review of January 6, he said, referring to the Office of the Inspector General.

In addition, he said, the department has stalled on providing other records to the OIG.

In a statement, Secret Service spokesman Anthony Guglielmi rejected the inspector-general’s allegation.

He said the agents’ phones were being wiped as part of a planned replacement programme that began before the OIG requested the information six weeks after the insurrection.

“The Secret Service notified DHS OIG of the loss of certain phones’ data, but confirmed to OIG that none of the texts it was seeking had been lost in the migration,” he said.   

Cuffari’s letter was addressed to the leaders of the Senate and House Homeland Security Committees. 

The chairman of the House Homeland Security committee is representative Bennie Thompson, who is also the chairman of the House committee investigating January 6.

Their investigation has sought to show that Trump knowingly incited the insurrection as an attempted “coup”.

The Secret Service has been criticised for not adequately anticipating the threat of the violent action by armed Trump supporters on January 6.

Trump had made a senior Secret Service official at the time, Tony Ornato, his personal deputy chief of staff.

Ornato has denied the account given to the January 6 committee by former Trump aide Cassidy Hutchinson that Trump tried to force the Secret Service to drive him to the Capitol as his supporters massed at the building, the seat of the US legislature.

But other then-White House officials have backed Hutchinson’s story. – AFP, July 15, 2022

Related News

Opinion / 1mth

US intelligence objectives: Destabilising the Malaysian political scene?

Opinion / 8mth

The power of being in the room

World / 2y

FBI identifies Trump shooter asThomas Matthew Crooks, 20

Malaysia / 2y

Anwar condemns assassination attempt on Trump

World / 2y

Trump hurt in assassination attempt

World / 2y

Aid for Ukraine held hostage by US politics

Spotlight

Malaysia

PRN Negeri Sembilan: The battlegrounds, big names and three-cornered fights to watch

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

People

Woman ends up with RM500 over food bill after date with ‘doctor’

Malaysia

Love scam: Twelve China nationals arrested in Ipoh over suspected online call centres

Malaysia

ASLI to field female candidate in Jeram Padang DUN

Community

‘Furry officer’ laid to rest as Kuching traffic police mourn beloved stray cat (video)

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Father mauled by crocodile as son watches in horror in Sabah river (UPDATED)

Malaysia

Johor shuts down Forest City Network School premises

Malaysia

Singapore: Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon to retire in Feb 2027, succeeded by Justice Sushil Nair

You may be interested

World

Hong Kong’s phone scam epidemic worsens as 61 arrested and losses soar to HK$720m

World

Epstein survivor reveals how financier built “ecosystem of abuse” to control women for years

World

Europe heatwave linked to around 12,000 deaths as climate risks intensify

World

Spain refuses to stay silent as pressure mounts on defenders of international justice

World

Andy Burnham to be made UK Labour leader on way to becoming prime minister

World

Cyanide fumes killed Bangkok bar fire victims within minutes, autopsies show

World

Trump escalates air strikes on Iran as ceasefire collapses

World

Trump’s China election attacks test fragile Beijing truce ahead of XI summit