A newly surfaced report, not previously made public, has drawn fresh attention to former President Joe Biden and former Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle. This development comes as part of a wave of recent headlines and revives questions surrounding one of the more puzzling episodes of Biden’s presidency, the discovery of a bag of cocaine inside the White House in July 2023.
According to investigative journalist Susan Crabtree of RealClearPolitics, newly surfaced documents have raised concerns about how swiftly the Secret Service closed the investigation—and how rapidly the evidence was allegedly destroyed. These developments may indicate a broader effort to bury the story before any serious accountability could be pursued.
Multiple agencies, including the FBI, the Secret Service, and D.C. hazmat teams, tested the material, according to internal records. However, the suitcase was apparently taken to the Metropolitan Police Department for disposal just two days after it was put into storage on July 12, just one day after the case had been abruptly closed.
A DEA document titled Destruction, obtained via Freedom of Information Act request, confirms that the cocaine was transferred for incineration. However, that same document failed to indicate an exact destruction date. More troubling still, no formal documentation proving that the evidence was destroyed has been made public.
The incident sparked friction inside the agency, with claims emerging that a senior official who opposed the destruction may have been sidelined in the process, a move allegedly approved by Director Cheatle herself.
The Secret Service, at the time, stated that the investigation yielded no viable leads. Spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said the FBI lab analysis did not reveal any usable fingerprints or DNA. Nonetheless, neither the Secret Service nor the FBI has ever released the lab reports, leaving forensic experts questioning the integrity of the inquiry.
According to Gary Clayton Harmor, a veteran forensic DNA analyst, the only way to be sure whether usable DNA existed on the baggie would have been to retest it, a step that appears not to have been taken before destruction. Harmor noted that different labs operate with varying thresholds of caution, and it remains unclear what standards the FBI applied in this case.
Adding to the controversy, former Secret Service agent and FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino suggested that this case has not been put to rest. He indicated that further scrutiny is being prepared, stating that you don’t care that a potentially hazardous substance made its way into the White House? We’re going to get answers.
As the public remains in the dark, the decision to eliminate the only physical piece of evidence, with no traceable documentation, has led many to question whether the Biden-era White House deliberately sought to avoid transparency. The absence of accountability continues to fuel suspicion that key details surrounding the incident may have been intentionally suppressed.
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