Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Security detail $1M a month for DeVos

Marshals replace in-house protectors

- EMMA BROWN AND DEVLIN BARRETT

WASHINGTON — Federal marshals are protecting Education Secretary Betsy DeVos at a cost to her agency of $1 million per month, according to the U.S. Marshals Service.

The Education Department has agreed to reimburse the marshals $7.78 million for their services from mid-February to the end of September of this year, according to a spokesman for the Marshals Service — an amount that works out to about $1 million per month. Marshals will continue providing security for the education secretary for the next four years, or until either agency decides to terminate the arrangemen­t, under an agreement signed last week.

While the department is spending the additional money on DeVos’ security, members of the in-house security team that guarded previous secretarie­s remain on the payroll. But they are not guarding DeVos and have not been assigned new duties, according to a department employee who was not authorized to speak to a reporter and asked for anonymity.

A department spokesman, who declined to be identified, said he could not comment on personnel decisions. He said the agency deferred to the federal marshals’ threat assessment and determinat­ion about what would be necessary to keep the secretary safe and able to do her job.

The new outlay is a tiny fraction of the department’s budget but comes as the Trump administra­tion has proposed slashing the spending plan by $9 billion, or 13.5 percent.

DeVos is the the only Cabinet secretary under the protection of the marshals, law enforcemen­t officers who are generally responsibl­e for protecting federal judges, transporti­ng prisoners, apprehend- ing fugitives and protecting witnesses. They also guard the deputy attorney general and Supreme Court justices when they travel.

The last Cabinet member protected by marshals was a director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, which ceased to be a Cabinet-level position in 2009, according to Marshals Service spokesman Lynzey Donahue.

Previous education secretarie­s have been protected by a team of department employees, many of whom were Secret Service veterans. That team was replaced by marshals Feb. 13, a few days after DeVos encountere­d protesters who briefly blocked her from entering a District of Columbia middle school.

DeVos was narrowly confirmed after a bruising confirmati­on process, during which she morphed from a quiet Republican donor and school voucher advocate into a household name. A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said DeVos had received more threats than previous education secretarie­s.

The Marshals Service is hiring nearly two dozen people to guard her, according to a person briefed on the security arrangemen­ts who was not authorized to speak publicly. The jobs include 20 positions at the GS-13 level ($95,000-$123,000 annual salary, depending on experience), and two positions at the GS14 level ($112,000 to $146,000 annual salary).

Donahue declined to say how many people are guarding DeVos and whether they are protecting her 24/7, citing concern for operationa­l security. The agency said it has determined that a threat to DeVos’s safety exists but declined to describe the nature or intensity of that threat.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States