


So when will this Insurrectionist be going to jail for perjury?
Remember Cassidy Hutchinson, the former West Wing aide who swore that the hearsay evidence she would tell the J6 Committee was the truth, the whole truth, so help her God? The new Inspector General's report on the Secret Service's activities on Jan. 6, 2021, has finally put this story and Hutchinson's reputation into the wood-chipper.
As you may recall, Hutchinson said that on January 6, as President Donald Trump was driven from his speech at a Save America rally to the White House, he "lunged" at the Secret Service driver when he learned that he wouldn't be going to the Capitol Building for a "peaceful and patriotic" protest. That was the story she told the January 6 Committee.
Hutchinson, immediately turned into the darling of the Never Trump left. She testified before the January 6 Committee -- which, coincidentally, put their documents into the wood-chipper too, small world -- that the angry orange man caused quite a scene in the car.
In 2022 she testified that "The president reached up towards the front of the vehicle to grab at the steering wheel. Mr. Engel [lead Secret Service detail agent] grabbed his arm, and said, 'Sir you need to take your hand off the steering wheel, we're going back to the West Wing, we're not going to the Capitol.' Mr. Trump then used his free hand to lunge towards Bobby Engel."
Hutchinson's "source" for the gossip was, she claimed, former Secret Service agent-turned-Trump White House Deputy Chief of Staff Tony Ornato. Ornato says he never witnessed the event, much less told her.
Furthermore, the IG's redacted report says the Secret Service took more than four months before he made himself available where he reiterated that this Trump episode never happened. The other Secret Service agents who were in the car said Trump never lunged at the driver, though one reported that he was angry that he couldn't go.
In other words, they didn't want to falsify the story, so they didn't bother investigating and allowed Madison Cornbread's lies to poison the discourse.
And the Secret Service didn't bother knocking the story down. They, under the leadership of Kim Cheatle and Ronald Rowe Jr., were all too willing to allow the disinformation to stand -- just as the FBI allowed the "51 Intelligence Officials" disinformation to stand, despite having determined themselves that Hunter Biden's laptop belonged to none other than Hunter Biden.
Speaking of, Cheatle and Rowe also wanted to destroy Hunter Biden's cocaine so that no one would ever know who brought Hunter Biden's cocaine into the White House.
Former Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle and others in top agency leadership positions wanted to destroy the cocaine discovered in the White House last summer, but the Secret Service Forensics Services Division and the Uniformed Division stood firm and rejected the push to dispose of the evidence, according to three sources in the Secret Service community.
...
At least one Uniformed Division officer was initially assigned to investigate the cocaine incident. But after he told his supervisors, including Cheatle and Acting Secret Service Director Ron Rowe, who was deputy director at the time, that he wanted to follow a certain crime-scene investigative protocol, he was taken off the case, according to a source within the Secret Service community familiar with the circumstances of his removal.
In other words, he wanted to swab the cocaine bag for DNA and Cheatle and Rowe blocked him for suggesting this extremely-obvious step.
Susan Crabtree writes further about Cheatle's role as a protector of the Biden family, and the usual method of dealing with Hunter Biden's drug paraphrenalia -- just getting rid of it.
Cheatle became close to the Biden family while serving on Vice President Joe Biden's protective detail -- so close that Biden tapped Cheatle for the director job in 2022, in part because of her close relationship to first lady Jill Biden.
When the cocaine was first discovered, Cheatle apparently knew it would spark a media firestorm. The incident prompted viral memes about Hunter Biden's addictions and accusations from Republican political figures, including Nikki Haley, that the Secret Service knew whose cocaine it was and was trying to cover it up.
Normally, the discovery of cocaine or another illegal narcotic in the White House complex or in and around the first family and their staff wouldn't come to light at all.
That's because the president's and first lady's, as well as family members' protective Secret Service details, the inner-most ring of protective agents assigned to the first family, would simply dispose of illegal drugs or other "contraband" found in the White House, personal residences, or other private areas of the president, his family, and White House staff, according to three sources in the Secret Service community.
But it wasn't a member of President Biden's regular detail who found the bag of cocaine just two days before the July 4 holiday last year. Instead, a member of the agency's Uniformed Division, which is charged with protecting the facilities and venues for presidents and other agency protectees, discovered the substance in the White House complex while conducting routine rounds of the building.
Of course, the Secret Service's main job is destroying evidence now.
The Inspector General for the Department of Homeland Security just released--after it being delayed by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas--a report on the Secret Service failures on January 6th that almost led to the assassination of Kamala Harris, the incoming Vice President of the United States by a pipe bomb.
Among the many things reported was this tidbit: the Secret Service didn't just stonewall the investigation. They deleted evidence that would have helped explain what happened that day and uncovered some of the failures.
You read that right: the Secret Service not only failed to properly protect the incoming Vice President on the day that her election to the office was certified, but they engaged in an illegal coverup.
Acting Director of the Secret Service Ronald Rowe was, at the time of that event and on July 13th this year, in charge of the protective details as the assistant director.
The "bomb" found outside the DNC is so real and so dangerous that the Secret Service... destroyed evidence about it.
Rowe again, of course.