The Guardian (USA)

Secret Service investigat­ion into White House cocaine fails to identify suspect

- Jenna Amatulli

The investigat­ion into the bag of cocaine found at the White House has concluded, with no suspects identified.

In a statement from the Secret Service, the organizati­on emphasized that it implemente­d safety closures after discoverin­g the cocaine and that it then “field tested and preliminar­ily determined” the drug “to not be a hazardous compound”.

It said the US Department of Homeland Security’s National Biodefense Analysis and Countermea­sures Center later analyzed the cocaine for any biothreats and those tests came back negative.

On how the item came to be inside the White House, the Secret Service said it conducted a “methodical review of security systems and protocols” that spanned “several days prior to the discovery of the substance”. It “developed an index of several hundred individual­s who may have accessed the area where the substance was found” before ultimately concluding that “insufficie­nt DNA was present for investigat­ive comparison­s”.

“Without physical evidence, the investigat­ion will not be able to single out a person of interest from the hundreds of individual­s who passed through the vestibule where the cocaine was discovered,” the statement continued. “At this time, the Secret Service’s investigat­ion is closed due to a lack of physical evidence.”

A source told CNN that the main theory held by investigat­ors was that the cocaine was left by a visitor with a tour group, who are asked to leave their phones inside a cubby in the West Wing.

The White House said in a statement that it has “been briefed by Secret Service on the outcome of their investigat­ion and [is] reviewing the informatio­n”. Last week, the discovery of the cocaine, which was found in “a work area” of the West Wing attached to the mansion that houses the president and his family, the Oval Office, the cabinet room, the press briefing room and offices for staff, prompted an evacuation of the White House.

“We have a yellow bar saying cocaine hydrochlor­ide,” a radio dispatch from the White House said on Sunday.

In response to the drug being found, speculatio­n ran rampant, with many critics of the administra­tion alleging that the cocaine belonged to Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, who has been open about his battle with addiction. The president and his son were not present in the White House when the cocaine was found.

Despite the White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, saying the White House had “confidence that they will get to the bottom of this” last week, it is unlikely at this point that a suspect will turn up.

However, this has not appeared to stop Congresswo­man Lauren Boebert, who tweeted a video of herself on Thursday outside a door labeled “restricted area”.

“Headed to get answers from the Secret Service about the bag of cocaine found at the White House near the Oval Office. It’s outrageous with the surveillan­ce at the White House that this administra­tion still hasn’t disclosed the identity of the cocaine culprit. More soon!” Boebert wrote.

 ?? Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images ?? A view of the West Wing of the White House in Washington DC where cocaine was found in ‘a workarea’ accessible to visitors. Photograph:
Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images A view of the West Wing of the White House in Washington DC where cocaine was found in ‘a workarea’ accessible to visitors. Photograph:

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