More unsubstantiated, pure, unadulterated bullshit
Post# of 65629
And guess what? None of your transparently false and desperate crap is going to save Trump from Mueller. NONE of it.
Quote:
Origins: Proving (or disproving) the genuineness of an anonymous second-hand report of information supposedly provided by an equally anonymous Secret Service agent is a formidable task, but several factors tend to indicate this piece is more likely something created for partisan political reasons than an actual Secret Service agent’s account:
• Philip H. Melanson’s history of the Secret Service makes no mention of protective agents experiencing the problems ascribed to either Bill or Hillary Clinton. The only such issue discussed therein was that President Clinton’s penchant for spontaneity and interacting with the public often made the job difficult for his Secret Service detail:
Clinton needed the crowds — and drove his Secret Service bodyguards crazy.
On the campaign trail, he would order one unscheduled stop after another. He would walk every inch of long rope lines, determined to shake each and every hand stretched out to him. The spontaneity proved nervewracking and never ended once he was elected.
Clinton always resisted the idea that he had to live in the Secret Service bubble. His friend, Arkansas State Police Captain Buddy Young, who was Clinton’s security chief for a decade in his home state, said, “I don’t think he likes all this Secret Service business. It’s just such a circus.”
Until the Lewinsky scandal isolated Clinton from the public appearances he relished, his agents came to realize that they had to be ready for him veering into crowds, restaurants, and other public places anytime, anywhere. His security was always a fluid proposition for his detail.
• As Melanson also noted, Secret Service agents would have considered it a serious breach of professionalism for one of their number to have publicly disclosed this sort of personal information about their charges:
The Service’s unwritten code of silence dictates that agents keep their observations to themselves. Today, many agents still do not want to accept that anyone among the Clintons’ protective details broke the long-understood rule: “There’s no way we would have talked about it. There’s an agency culture, an unwritten code. That was a pretty tough time for us [because people accused us of breaking the code].”