Secret Service told Biden the person’s name who brought cocaine into White House: Report

Secret Service told Biden the person's name who brought cocaine into White House: Report

According to a report from Soldier of Fortune on Sunday (August 6), the US Secret Service has given President Joe Biden the identity of the person who carried cocaine into the White House last month. On July 2, a white material was discovered in the White House library. An investigation was initiated, and a preliminary field test on this product returned positive cocaine results. Due to a lack of evidence, the investigation was concluded on July 13.

‘Biden recognizes the individual’

However, according to the Soldier of Fortune claim, which cited three security sources, investigators and President Biden are both aware of who carried cocaine (into the White House). “If you want the name, ask Joe Biden. He knows who it is,” one of the sources told the magazine.

The publication contacted Biden personally about the allegations. “According to three reliable sources, the Secret Service gave you the name of the person who brought the cocaine into the Executive Mansion.” Is this correct, and could you please confirm the name? If you know the name and are not disclosing it, please explain why,” the magazine’s publisher, Susan Katz Keating, wrote to Biden.

The message, however, was returned as undelivered, according to the report.

When cocaine was discovered on White House grounds, observers suspected it belonged to President Biden’s son Hunter, according to the article. According to another security source, “it was someone within the Biden family orbit, and it wasn’t Hunter.”

On July 7, Representative James Comer, head of the House Oversight Committee, asked Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle to conduct “a staff-level briefing” on the cocaine issue.

The presence of illegal substances in the White House is abhorrent and a humiliating chapter in the history of the White House. The cocaine was discovered in a storage facility “routinely used by White House staff and guests to store cell phones,” according to a senior law enforcement officer, according to Comrer’s letter to Cheatle.

“This alarming development requires the Committee to assess White House security practices and determine whose failures led to an evacuation of the building and the finding of the illegal substance,” the letter also said.

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