Tag: white house break in
Cultural Problems At Secret Service Run Deep

Cultural Problems At Secret Service Run Deep

Julia Pierson’s head has been delivered on the proverbial platter.

She resigned as head of the Secret Service last week, voicing the platitudes that generally come with such things, avowing that stepping down is “in the best interests of the agency.”

Congress made a rare display of bipartisanship, forming a great chorus of pontification as representatives hammered Pierson in a House hearing after a man scaled the White House fence, breezed through the unlocked doors and traipsed through much of the executive mansion before being apprehended.

Shortly after her testimony, it was reported that Secret Service agents had recently allowed another shocking breach of security, having allowed President Obama to ride in the same elevator as an armed ex-convict. The man was a security guard, but the agents seem to have had no idea he was armed or that he had a criminal record.

For Pierson, it was a career-ending week, but for members of Congress it was a bonanza media opportunity, a chance to have their pithy quips rebroadcasted and retweeted just in time for the fall campaign.

But the biggest winners are the bureaucrats of the Secret Service upper management. These are the people best positioned to make changes in their organization’s culture — changes they have failed to make on their own and that they can be counted on to fight if anybody else tries to impose them. They have been delivered a gift.

They are the winners here. Not the American people. Not the president, his family or the diplomats the Secret Service is in charge of protecting. Deep change at the Secret Service has yet to begin.

Pierson, in managing the White House invasion scandal, clearly failed. I can think of two plausible explanations of her bizarre lapse.

One is that she was misinformed. That she relied on inaccurate accounts from her underlings about how Omar Gonzalez was able to so flagrantly breach White House security. And they lied to her. Bad actors do that. They cover their tracks to stay in place.

The other explanation is worse: that Pierson is part of the cover-up. In which case, we’re especially lucky she is gone. But either way, an inescapable question arises: What happens to everyone involved in concocting this lie (beyond Pierson)? Will they be sanctioned? Will the Secret Service’s standard practices be scrutinized? Will managers be canned for deviating from those practices or for lax internal investigations? That would indicate real change.

The Secret Service is an agency of 6,700 staffers, many of them career employees like Pierson who had logged nearly 30 years when she was assigned the top job 18 months ago.

“The Oversight Committee will continue to examine clear and serious agency failures at the Secret Service,” promised its chair, Rep. Darrell Issa. Problem is, just continuing to tally failings, to use them as political trump cards, offers little toward changing the agency in meaningful ways.

In fact, the more turmoil keeps swirling, the less likely it is that substantial change can be implemented. Issa’s next comment got more to the point: “Problems at the Secret Service predate Ms. Pierson’s tenure as director and her resignation certainly does not solve them.”

Yes, Mr. Chairman, and what exactly is your solution?

Shelves and shelves of books have been written on the subject of building, changing and maintaining cultures within organizations, be they Fortune 500 companies, tech startups, public agencies or neighborhood book clubs.

The culture of any organization dictates its internal functioning and the attitudes staff members have toward each other, their jobs and those they serve. It is an extremely difficult thing to uproot, or even change in any substantial and long-lasting way.

Culture often is incredibly durable, weathering periods of turmoil, experts say. As conventional business wisdom puts it, “Culture eats strategy for lunch.”

The person put in place to move this mountain has to be equally patient and adept at discerning who in the management echelon can and cannot be trusted. Oh, and he or she must be ruthless. Judiciously ruthless. A large purge needs to happen, but the right heads must roll. All those who presided over the catalog of foul-ups over the last few years need to go. Meanwhile, the conscientious rank-and-file agents need to be reassured that the turmoil will create a better Secret Service.

Signs that Pierson was not that leader are painfully evident in her resignation.

She played victim, noting “the media has made it clear that this is what they expected.” Resigning, Pierson told the Associated Press, was “the noble thing to do.” She noted that it would “take pressure off the organization.”

Yet pressure is exactly what the Secret Service needs.

Mary Sanchez is an opinion-page columnist for The Kansas City Star. Readers may write to her at: Kansas City Star, 1729 Grand Blvd., Kansas City, MO 64108-1413, or via email at msanchez@kcstar.com.

AFP Photo/Jim Watson

Want more political news and analysis? Sign up for our daily email newsletter!

New Director Seen As Capable Of Restoring Secret Service Prestige

New Director Seen As Capable Of Restoring Secret Service Prestige

By Matt Hansen, Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — As he took command this week, new Secret Service chief Joseph Clancy was praised by former colleagues who said he would steady the president’s protective service in its moment of turmoil over security lapses that led to the resignation of its previous director.

From his time as a high school football coach to his service on the presidential protection detail, Clancy is described by people who know him well as composed, decisive and intense. Though they acknowledge that the institutional problems at the Secret Service will probably take time to solve, they say he is up to the task.

Clancy, 58, was appointed Wednesday as acting director after the resignation of Julia Pierson, who left the agency after several security lapses came to light, especially embarrassing for an agency long considered elite and mostly above public scrutiny. The cascade of revelations was triggered after a man scaled the fence surrounding the White House last month and ran well into the building, breaching several layers of security before being captured. Now the Secret Service is the subject of an independent investigation.

Clancy retired in 2011 after serving on the protection detail for several presidents, including Barack Obama. He then worked as director of security for Comcast Corp. before being asked this week to return to Washington.

While the White House has given no indications of how long Clancy might serve, lawmakers are calling for major changes that may be more than an interim director could accomplish.

Former colleagues were quick to support Clancy as a strong pick to reform the agency. “He’s an excellent choice,” said Larry Amaker, who protected the vice president while Clancy served on the presidential detail. “I hope that he is able to overcome some of the issues that are there.”

Others praised his unflappability under the stress of the job. “Joe’s calm is a huge attribute of his,” said Danny Spriggs, the former deputy director of the Secret Service. “Some of that comes from his previous life as a high school teacher and a football coach. He has a tendency to assess things very thoroughly before he takes action.”

Clancy grew up outside Philadelphia in a working-class family and graduated from Archbishop John Carroll High School in 1973, according to Francis Fox, the president of the school.

After studying briefly at West Point, Clancy graduated from Villanova University and became a history teacher at Father Judge High School in Philadelphia. There, he was a driven and precise teacher who helped coach the football team with his brother, remembered George Hanlon, who was Clancy’s supervisor.

“When he walked into the room, he was quiet,” Hanlon said. “You knew he had a command of the situation.”

When Clancy told him he was leaving after one year to join the Secret Service, Hanlon was not surprised.

“I knew they were going to take him,” he said.

Fox invited him later to return to his alma mater to address students. Rather than talking about his accomplishments at the Secret Service, Clancy focused instead on how he had struggled academically at West Point but never lost sight of his career goals.

“He said it was his lifelong dream to be in the Secret Service,” Fox said. “He said it took him five tries before being accepted, and that he was passed over many times for promotions. Perseverance was part of his DNA.”

Colleagues from his time as an agent were similarly supportive. Robert Byers, who supervised Clancy on the president’s detail, remembered him as “one of the most competent” agents he worked with in 23 years at the agency.

Yet Clancy’s time on the detail was not without controversies. He oversaw presidential protection when an uninvited couple attended Obama’s 2009 state dinner for the Indian prime minister. Three agents were placed on administrative leave.

There were lighter moments, too, on Clancy’s watch.

Former Secret Service special agent Dan Emmett wrote of Clancy’s “calmer than calm” demeanor in his memoir and said Clancy would often accompany President Bill Clinton on his jogs through Washington, a special logistical challenge.

“We didn’t mind the running,” he wrote. “To run with the president of the United States through downtown D.C. and then have him stop and shake hands with the man on the street was unwise on Clinton’s part — dangerous as hell, in fact — and we loved it.”

But his fellow agency veterans did not minimize the challenges facing Clancy as he assumes his new role. “He’ll steady the ship,” Spriggs said. “But it depends on the issues to see whether his particular attributes are well-suited.”

The need for change would take time to be realized, others predicted. “These issues have been around for a while,” Amaker said. “They won’t be fixed overnight.”

AFP Photo/Peter Dejong

Secret Service Director Resigns Over Security Breaches

Secret Service Director Resigns Over Security Breaches

Washington (AFP) – The director of the US Secret Service resigned Wednesday following a string of lapses by the elite presidential protection branch, including one in which an intruder ran through the front door of the White House.

“Today, Julia Pierson, the Director of the United States Secret Service, offered her resignation, and I accepted it,” said Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson in a statement.

This story will be updated.

AFP Photo/Jim Watson

Accused White House Intruder Pleads Not Guilty

Accused White House Intruder Pleads Not Guilty

By Matt Hansen, Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The Iraq war veteran accused of running into the White House with a knife on Sept. 19 pleaded not guilty Wednesday to three criminal charges in a case that exposed security lapses in the Secret Service.

Omar Gonzalez, 42, stared straight ahead and said nothing during his court appearance in Washington. He waived his right to a detention hearing, meaning he will remain in custody.

According to court papers, Gonzalez climbed over the north fence of the White House, sprinted unimpeded across the north lawn, opened the unlocked front door of the executive mansion and then tussled with guards who chased him on the first floor before he was finally subdued in the East Room.

President Barack Obama and his family were not home at the time.

AFP Photo/Brendan Smialowski