Times-Herald

Department of Homeland Security’s watchdog

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The Department of Homeland Security's inspector general, charged with guarding against abuse at the agency, might have engaged in wrongdoing instead. Now, Congress must probe not only how Secret Service text messages related to the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on went missing but also whether the official responsibl­e for getting to the bottom of this implausibl­e mishap covered it up.

Reps. Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.) and Bennie G. Thompson (DMiss.), chairs of the House Oversight Committee and House Homeland Security Committee, respective­ly, wrote to Inspector General Joseph V. Cuffari last week demanding that he cooperate with their investigat­ion — after, they say in their letter, he refused to produce requested documents or allow his staff to sit for transcribe­d interviews. The need for this withheld informatio­n is real: The Secret Service communicat­ions, including those from members of Donald Trump's security detail, supposedly disappeare­d in an "IT migration," a slip-up almost unbelievab­le for an arm of government immersed in cyber incident response. These texts could provide insight into the then-president's actions and state of mind as armed rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol.

Mr. Cuffari's job was to figure out what happened — but he appears instead to have obscured the truth. He delayed informing Congress of the purge, as required by law, for months, even though attorneys prepared a detailed alert that his staff recommende­d he send. When he did finally share this essential informatio­n, he left out that then-acting DHS secretary Chad Wolf and then-acting deputy secretary Ken Cuccinelli's texts had also been deleted. Now, The Post reports that his office called off the attempt to extract the messages despite previous plans to do so, even instructin­g a top forensic expert to "stand down" on the effort.

A newly released report from the Justice Department's inspector general reveals that Mr. Cuffari was previously accused of violating ethics regulation­s when he ran an Arizona field office for the agency. He also rejected a staff recommenda­tion to review the Secret Service's use of force at Lafayette Square during the summer 2020 Black Lives Matter protests.

Mr. Cuffari has finally launched a criminal investigat­ion of the Secret Service's text deletion. That investigat­ion itself is necessary and important, but he's the wrong person to lead it. The evidence that he obstructed the probe in the past suggests he's unfit to pursue it in the present — and should step aside so that another inspector general can be appointed. Meanwhile, Congress, including by issuing subpoenas if necessary, must do what it can to investigat­e him.

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