Houston Chronicle Sunday

Secret Service may leave DHS, rejoin Treasury

- By Colleen Long

WASHINGTON — The White House is throwing its support behind a plan to transfer the U.S. Secret Service back to the Treasury Department to better focus on the growing threat of online financial crimes.

Shifting the agency from within the Department of Homeland Security to the Treasury would require action from Congress, but President Donald Trump is confident enough that he plans to include the Secret Service under the Treasury’s budget in his proposal expected Monday, according to five administra­tion officials with knowledge of the move. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing negotiatio­ns.

The Department of Homeland Security’s intense focus on immigratio­n has only added to the growing divide between what the Secret Service sees as its dual missions — protecting the president and investigat­ing financial crime — and the mission of its parent department.

But there are strong concerns the Secret Service’s departure could lead to the eventual dismantlin­g of DHS, which was formed after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks as a counterter­rorism agency bringing together security agencies across the government.

The Secret Service is best known as the agency responsibl­e for protecting the president, but its original purpose when it was formed in 1865 was to investigat­e financial crimes such as counterfei­t money proliferat­ing during the Civil War. It was housed under the Treasury until 2003, when it was transferre­d to the new Department of Homeland Security.

Only about half of the Secret Service’s budget is spent on protective services. It also has a robust cybercrime division, state-ofthe-art forensic labs and a threat assessment center that studies how to mitigate and train against threats. The agency’s annual budget of about $2.3 billion would shift from one department to another under Trump’s proposal.

In the Trump era, DHS has been highly focused on immigratio­n, one of the Republican president’s top priorities.

“The biggest challenge has been the president’s immigratio­n focus,” said Rep. Bennie Thompson, the head of the House Homeland Security Committee. “The immigratio­n focus takes up a lot of the resources for DHS. It’s been very difficult for Secret Service to be fully funded.”

Department of Homeland Security officials initially pushed back against shifting the Secret Service back to the Treasury, concerned it could spark an exodus from other agencies contained within DHS, a 240,000-person department that also includes disaster relief, the U.S. Coast Guard and the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion, according to the officials. DHS referred questions to the White House.

The Secret Service is “part of a unique cohort that gets lost in the massive bureaucrac­y,” said Breanne Deppisch, who studies the topic for the Aspen Institute think tank.

Deppisch said she feared the news could be a blow to other non-immigratio­n agencies at Homeland Security, specifical­ly the newly formed Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency, tasked with election security. She worried it could deepen recruitmen­t problems at other agencies and lower morale, which is already low department­wide.

It’s not the first time such a move has been considered in recent years. After a high-profile prostituti­on scandal in 2012 and other missteps, Democrats and Republican­s in Congress debated whether the agency should be relocated, broken up or shrunk.

A feasibilit­y study was completed last year from a working group of Homeland Security, the Treasury and the White House, and the results found that moving the Secret Service would help enhance collaborat­ion in the Treasury and would put the Secret Service back on the map as a large law enforcemen­t agency, though it could harm morale at Homeland Security.

“DHS employees, members of Congress and staff, the homeland security committee — may perceive a weakened DHS with the loss of Secret Service,” the working group wrote in the report. “Such a loss could open DHS up to additional reforms or reorganiza­tions, perhaps even some involving the transfer or dismantlin­g of other operating components, further weakening the department at a critical time in its developmen­t.”

Secret Service leadership recommende­d the move, according to the report.

“The Secret Service has been involved in discussion­s regarding the potential move and is appreciati­ve of the active interest in advancing its integrated mission” according to an agency statement.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Fox Business this week that he expected legislatio­n to be introduced soon.

But it may not be that simple to convince lawmakers — not all senators with a stake in the agency voiced support, and some House Democrats are strongly against it.

Trump signaled a few weeks ago that he approved of the Secret Service transfer.

“The President and his administra­tion support the bipartisan efforts of Senator Lindsey Graham and Senator Dianne Feinstein to return the Secret Service to its historic home at the U.S. Department of the Treasury,” White House spokesman Judd Deere said in a statement. “This transfer will improve the Secret Service’s ability to carry out its integrated, dual mission of protection and investigat­ions.”

 ?? Bloomberg file photo ?? A U.S. Secret Service agent stands guard as Marine One, carrying President Donald Trump, takes off from the South Lawn of the White House last month.
Bloomberg file photo A U.S. Secret Service agent stands guard as Marine One, carrying President Donald Trump, takes off from the South Lawn of the White House last month.

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