Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember when the secret service used to be viewed as competent?
This made me howl with laughter. Decades ago, SS agents on the street totally missed a break-in right next door (very, very close!) to VIP they were guarding. They were roasted by the neighborhood for years afterwards!
The secret service are not supposed to provide police/ protection services to anyone besides their protectee. This makes sense if you think about it- otherwise criminals could break into houses next door in order to distract them away from the VIP
Anonymous wrote:Not a conspiracy guy generally but I have questions here
- doors left unlocked? All the time or… just this once?
- no alarm system?
- Jake hears bump in the night, and instead of calling his protective detail right outside, he just wings it
- when he discovers it’s an intruder he has…. no panic button? No nothing? No way to communicate with detail?
Doesn’t add up for me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember when the secret service used to be viewed as competent?
This made me howl with laughter. Decades ago, SS agents on the street totally missed a break-in right next door (very, very close!) to VIP they were guarding. They were roasted by the neighborhood for years afterwards!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not a conspiracy guy generally but I have questions here
- doors left unlocked? All the time or… just this once?
- no alarm system?
- Jake hears bump in the night, and instead of calling his protective detail right outside, he just wings it
- when he discovers it’s an intruder he has…. no panic button? No nothing? No way to communicate with detail?
Doesn’t add up for me
You read too many spy novels.
Protective detail? Panic buttons?
Anonymous wrote:Not a conspiracy guy generally but I have questions here
- doors left unlocked? All the time or… just this once?
- no alarm system?
- Jake hears bump in the night, and instead of calling his protective detail right outside, he just wings it
- when he discovers it’s an intruder he has…. no panic button? No nothing? No way to communicate with detail?
Doesn’t add up for me
Anonymous wrote:Remember when the secret service used to be viewed as competent?
Anonymous wrote:Not a conspiracy guy generally but I have questions here
- doors left unlocked? All the time or… just this once?
- no alarm system?
- Jake hears bump in the night, and instead of calling his protective detail right outside, he just wings it
- when he discovers it’s an intruder he has…. no panic button? No nothing? No way to communicate with detail?
Doesn’t add up for me
Anonymous wrote:Not a conspiracy guy generally but I have questions here
- doors left unlocked? All the time or… just this once?
- no alarm system?
- Jake hears bump in the night, and instead of calling his protective detail right outside, he just wings it
- when he discovers it’s an intruder he has…. no panic button? No nothing? No way to communicate with detail?
Doesn’t add up for me
Anonymous wrote:This has happened before at the White House, with people jumping the fence and sometimes getting into the building.
Leonnig tells of agents taking selfies with Donald Trump’s sleeping grandson. Trump asked their supervisor, “These guys weren’t being pervs, right?”
The US Secret Service was investigating after an apparently intoxicated and confused man walked past agents and into the Washington home of Joe Biden’s national security adviser.
Jake Sullivan confronted the man and told him to leave, the Washington Post first reported, of an incident that happened at about 3am one night in late April. There were no signs of forced entry.
The Post said: “Sullivan has a round-the-clock Secret Service detail. But agents stationed outside the house were unaware that an intruder had gotten inside … until the man had already left and Sullivan came outside to alert the agents.”