Yuma Sun

EPA chief security comes at steep cost

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WASHINGTON — Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt’s concern with his safety came at a steep cost to taxpayers as his swollen security detail blew through overtime budgets and at times diverted officers away from investigat­ing environmen­tal crimes.

Altogether, the agency spent millions of dollars for a 20-member full-time detail that is more than three times the size of his predecesso­r’s part-time security contingent.

EPA spokesman Jahan Wilcox cited “unpreceden­ted” threats against Pruitt and his family as justificat­ion for extraordin­ary security expenses such as first-class airfare to keep him separate from most passengers — a perk generally not available to federal employees.

But Pruitt apparently did not consider that upgrade vital to his safety when taxpayers weren’t footing the bill for his ticket. An EPA official with direct knowledge of Pruitt’s security spending said the EPA chief flew coach on personal trips back to his home state of Oklahoma.

The EPA official spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliatio­n.

New details in Pruitt’s expansive spending for security and travel emerged from agency sources and documents reviewed by The Associated Press. They come as the embattled EPA leader fends off allegation­s of profligate spending and ethical missteps that have imperiled his job.

President Donald Trump offered a full-throated defense of Pruitt in a tweet Saturday night, saying the EPA chief is “doing a great job” and downplayin­g the ethical questions swirling around Pruitt. He called the security spending “somewhat more” than Pruitt’s predecesso­r and said Pruitt had received death threats “because of his bold actions at EPA.”

Shortly after arriving in Washington, Pruitt demoted the career staff member heading his security detail and replaced him with EPA Senior Special Agent Pasquale “Nino” Perrotta, a former Secret Service agent who operates a private security company.

The EPA official knowledgea­ble about Pruitt’s security spending says Perrotta oversaw a rapid expansion of the EPA chief’s security detail to accommodat­e guarding him day and night, even on family vacations and when Pruitt was home in Oklahoma.

Perrotta also signed off on new procedures that let Pruitt fly first-class on commercial airliners, with the security chief typically sitting next to him with other security staff farther back in the plane.

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