Secret Service will not renew former director Kim Cheatle's security clearance
- The Secret Service has denied former Director Kimberly Cheatle a renewal of her security clearance after her resignation following an assassination attempt on Donald Trump.
- Sean Curran, the current Secret Service Director, stated that not all former directors would have their security clearances renewed, citing failures surrounding the Trump rally incident.
- Senator Ron Johnson argued that Cheatle's leadership contributed to the agency's failures, stating he saw no reason for her clearance to be reinstated.
- Cheatle admitted to security lapses and accepted responsibility, claiming that any assertion of misleading testimony was false.
29 Articles
29 Articles
Ron Johnson made one demand about Kimberly Cheatle that stopped her comeback cold - Political Animal News
Failed Biden-era officials thought they could quietly slip back into the Washington, D.C. swamp. One powerful Republican senator had other plans. And Ron Johnson made one demand about Kimberly Cheatle that stopped her comeback cold. Ron Johnson draws a line in the sand on accountability There’s a new sheriff in town when it comes to […]
'Disgraced': Secret Service stops renewal of former director's security clearance * WorldNetDaily * by Susan Crabtree, James Eustis, Real Clear Wire
Kimberly Cheatle, then-director of the U.S. Secret Service, testified before Congress on the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump on Monday, July 22, 2024. The Secret Service was moving forward with renewing former Director Kimberly Cheatle’s top-level security clearance but reversed course after RealClearPolitics inquired about a key senator’s opposition, according to multiple sources in the Secret Service community. Sen. Ron …
Secret Service won't renew security clearance for agency director who quit after Trump shooting
The Secret Service was moving forward with renewing former Director Kimberly Cheatle's top-level security clearance but reversed course after RealClearPolitics inquired about a key senator's opposition, according to multiple sources in the Secret Service community. Sen. Ron Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican who chairs the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations and previously chaired the full Homeland Security panel, argued that Cheatle should no…
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