Rep. Cleaver (D-MO): African-Americans Think Secret Service Is Trying To Expose The President

Is The Secret Service Trying To Kill Obama? Blacks Eye Agency With Suspicion After Security Lapses

As a lengthy record of U.S. Secret Service security lapses has been exposed, skepticism of the agency among African-Americans is growing, with an increasing number of blacks believing that agents who are supposed to be protecting President Barack Obama are deliberately dropping the ball. The latest scandal to plague the agency was reported on Friday, and involved a man who posed as a member of Congress and got close to the president while he delivered a speech.

“It is something that is widespread in black circles,” U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II, D-Mo., who is black, told the New York Times. “I’ve been hearing this for some time: ‘Well, the Secret Service, they’re trying to expose the president.’ You hear a lot of that from African-Americans in particular.”

Repeated security failures led former Secret Service Director Julia Pierson to resign earlier this week after she lost the confidence of Obama and Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson.

The Secret Service scandal began with alleged fence-jumper Omar Gonzalez, who allegedly was carrying a knife when he accessed the White House on Sept. 19. Gonzalez, a 42-year-old Iraq War veteran, got as far as the East Room before he was subdued.

Earlier this week, it was revealed that an armed ex-convict was in an elevator with the president when Obama visited the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention headquarters in Atlanta on Sept. 30. The Secret Service didn't know the man, a security contractor, had a gun until agents interviewed him about repeatedly taking pictures of the president with his cell phone. The incident went against Secret Service protocol.

And Friday it was reveled that a man posing as a member of Congress accessed a backstage area during or after a speech made by Obama at a Congressional Black Caucus event last week, according to Bloomberg.

The string of failures has caused some in the black community to question whether there’s a blatant attempt to provide Obama with lax security.

"What’s up with the Secret Service? There could be only two reasons that Secret Service protection for President Barack Obama is slipping these days: Either agents missed the memo that he's the first black president or they really are just that overwhelmed," wrote Charles D. Ellison, a political strategist and contributor to The Root, an online magazine for an African-American audience.

Donald Tucker, a retired Secret Service agent, who was among the first blacks to protect a president, estimated that most African-Americans are distrustful of the agency.

"I would say over 75 percent of the African-American community are suspicious and think that could be a situation, based on all the other things they think has happened to President Obama because he's an African-American, politically,” Tucker told the New York Times. "They're adding that to the pot."

Cleaver doesn't agree and said that blacks should have more faith in the Secret Service's intentions. He said that "there's nothing further from the truth" than the Secret Service deliberately making security lapses.

"t's a little dangerous for us to allow that thinking to grow and spread," he said. "To the degree we can dismantle it, we should. I'm going to dispel it as much as I can."

http://www.ibtimes.com/secret-servi...gency-suspicion-after-security-lapses-1699143
 
What garbage ... when in doubt the black community plays the race card. Who is Emanuel Cleaver II? Wally or Beaver could have handled this better.

And Friday it was reveled that a man posing as a member of Congress accessed a backstage area during or after a speech made by Obama at a Congressional Black Caucus event last week, according to Bloomberg.

Surely this is whitey's fault
 
Of course they think that. There is no community more afflicted with conspiracy theories than the black community. It's always someone or something out to get them. Always some grand plan that keeps them down.
 
Of course they think that. There is no community more afflicted with conspiracy theories than the black community. It's always someone or something out to get them. Always some grand plan that keeps them down.

And that thinking is 100% reinforced by Odumbo .. since nothing is ever his fault and he always points the finger elsewhere ...
 
I'm actually surprised obama didn't enlist the Nation of Islam to provide security. In fairness, they could hardly be more dysfunctional than the SS.
 
Pierson Punted: Obama, Congress Must Now Undo Bush-Era Injustice to Secret Service
Post-9/11 reform robbed the agency of its autonomy and mojo.
By Ron Fournier

"October 1, 2014 It's not enough. Julia Pierson's otherwise distinguished career at the Secret Service ended Wednesday when she resigned as director of the disgraced agency—her last act the right one. Now President Obama and Congress must do their part to fix the Secret Service.

"They should start by undoing a Bush-era reform approved by Congress in the name of hardening U.S. defenses against terrorism. After 9/11, several Secret Service agents, including those in leadership, warned me that no good would come from plans to yank the quasi-independent agency out of the Treasury Department and fold it into the fledgling monstrosity that would come to be known as the Homeland Security Department.

"We are who we are because we aren't a bureaucracy," a senior Secret Service official told me in February 2003, a month before DHS swallowed the service.

"At the Treasury Department, the Secret Service's leadership had autonomy, and its agents were encouraged to consider themselves elite. The Secret Service was not just the leading law-enforcement agency at Treasury, it was at the apex of the entire profession. Only the best cops became agents.

"The Secret Service leadership could draw on the agency's reputation and relative independence to defend its budget, its professionalism, and its mission from political encroachment. Before 2003, the director of the Secret Service was a player—somebody even the president and members of Congress had to think twice about crossing.


"By contrast, Pierson—and, I would argue, any Secret Service director inside the DHS labyrinth—was just another bureaucrat fighting for turf, money, and autonomy in one of the largest, least efficient agencies in Washington. As we see at the Internal Revenue Service, the National Football League, and the many other acronymed entities, it's easy to lose sight of your calling from inside an ossified institution.

"Secret Service personnel, particularly those in uniform, are often paid less today than law-enforcement officials in other agencies. More than the money..."

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