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DHS Watchdog Takes Over Inquiry Into Lost Secret Service Texts From Capitol Riot

The Inspector General of Homeland Security has instructed the Secret Service to stop its own internal investigation.

DHS Watchdog Takes Over Inquiry Into Lost Secret Service Texts From Capitol Riot

The Homeland Security Department’s watchdog has opened an investigation into the loss of Secret Service text messages from the days surrounding the attack on the US Capitol last year.

The Inspector General of Homeland Security is conducting the probe and has instructed the Secret Service to stop its own internal investigation, according to a person familiar with the situation who asked not to be identified. 

That further muddies efforts of the House’s Jan, 6 committee, which is wrapping up a series of televised hearings with a prime-time session Thursday. The committee is seeking missing text messages from 24 Secret Service employees related to Jan. 5 and the day of the Capitol attack.

As recently as Wednesday, House January 6 panel Chair Bennie Thompson and Vice Chair Liz Cheney had issued a statement Wednesday that “every effort” must be made by the Secret Service to retrieve what the agency claims were inadvertently erased texts during an equipment upgrade that began on Jan. 27, 2021.

A spokesman for the committee said Thursday the panel had no comment about the Secret Service -- including on whether it has been told of a potential criminal probe.

Homeland Security’s Inspector General office issued a statement citing policy to neither confirm or deny information about an investigation.

Secret Service Chief of Communications Anthony Guglielmi said in a statement that it has received the Inspector General’s letter on the topic and has informed the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 assault on the Capitol. 

If investigators find evidence a crime was committed, the matter is typically referred to the Justice Department for prosecution. The Homeland Security probe was earlier reported by NBC.

The committee has subpoenaed the texts for clues to what happened that day, including reports of then-President Donald Trump being blocked by agents from accompanying his supporters to the Capitol. The panel plans to hold a prime-time hearing, its last in a recent series, Thursday night. 

Jan. 6 Hearing Finale to Make Case of Trump as Derelict in Duty

The texts could provide insight into that episode as well as security concerns surrounding then-Vice President Mike Pence, who had gone to the Capitol to preside over the Electoral College certification of Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 election.

The Secret Service, Guglielmi said, “will conduct a thorough legal review to ensure we are fully cooperative with all oversight efforts and that they do not conflict with each other.”

The agency has denied wrongdoing and said some data was lost when it reset its mobile phones to factory settings in January 2021, before the Inspector General’s inspection began the next month. 

On Tuesday, the keeper of federal records asked the Secret Service to determine whether any text messages by agents around the time of the attack were improperly deleted. The National Archives and Records Administration said in a letter to the agency that it must submit a report within 30 days documenting what occurred. 

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