New details have emerged this week about the Biden White House cocaine scandal.
A baggie of cocaine was discovered in the West Wing after Hunter Biden visited the White House in early July 2023.
The Secret Service closed its investigation into the Biden White House cocaine scandal without conducting any interviews, and no suspect was identified. According to CNN, the baggie of cocaine was “found in a blind spot for surveillance cameras.” The White House initially stated that there were no fingerprints, DNA samples, or leads.
However, it was later revealed that there was a partial DNA match, and then-Secret Service Director Kim Cheatle attempted to cover it up. The cocaine was ultimately destroyed.
The Secret Service tied promotions to what employees knew about the cocaine scandal. Dan Bongino previously revealed that several people were given promotions to keep quiet about efforts to make the cocaine evidence disappear.
On Tuesday, RealClearPolitics reporter Susan Crabtree reported that a Secret Service agent was placed on administrative leave for creating cocaine commemorative coins in protest of the leadership’s cover-up.
The officer created coins that read, “see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.”
“The Secret Service Uniformed Division officers who guard the White House were so pissed off that they were forced to be part of a cocaine cover-up in 2023, as several Secret Service sources referred to it, that one officer made a ‘see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil’ commemorative challenge coin about the ordeal to lighten the mood and improve morale within the ranks, according to the photos below and several Secret Service sources,” Susan Crabtree reported.
“The officer was punished (placed on administrative leave for an unknown amount of time) for making and distributing the unauthorized coin. The coin’s distribution took place within weeks of the USSS closing the case in 11 days,” she said.
Earlier this year, the FBI announced it had reopened the investigation into cocaine found at the White House.
“Shortly after swearing in, the Director and I evaluated a number of cases of potential public corruption that, understandably, have garnered public interest. We made the decision to either re-open, or push additional resources and investigative attention, to these cases,” FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino said.
“These cases are the DC pipe bombing investigation, the cocaine discovery at the prior administration’s White House, and the leak of the Supreme Court Dobbs case. I receive requested briefings on these cases weekly and we are making progress. If you have any investigative tips on these matters that may assist us then please contact the FBI,” Dan Bongino added.
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