Rep. Loudermilk Demands DHS Secretary Mayorkas Hand Over U.S. Secret Service Report on Jan. 6 Events
Washington,
July 24, 2024
Washington D.C. (July 24, 2024) | This week, Rep. Barry Loudermilk (GA-11), Chairman of the Committee on House Administration's Oversight Subcommittee wrote to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandros Mayorkas on the refusal to release outstanding reports concerning the security failures on and around January 6, 2021. The Department of Homeland Security Office of Inspector General (“DHS OIG”) has a number of outstanding reports, including:
"This obstruction appears to be a pattern of behavior to delay or prevent the release of certain reports that could be damaging to the Department of Homeland Security," said Rep. Loudermilk. "At a time when the security forces of our country are under extreme scrutiny, to delay or slowwalk the release of these reports is unacceptable. I look forward to the answers these reports will uncover, and my team and I will be holding Mayorkas responsible for his failures." ... "Based on information provided to this Subcommittee, since Secretary Mayorkas was confirmed in 2021, DHS has repeatedly obstructed, delayed, or denied the ability of the DHS OIG to conduct effective oversight, as is mandated by the Inspector General Act of 1978. Such examples include refusing to provide documents on the grounds of the Presidential Records Act and the Privacy Act, as well as instructing DHS employees not to provide documents directly to the DHS OIG. However, these reasons for obstruction purposely misunderstand the role of the DHS OIG to conduct internal reviews. Regulations such as the Privacy Act apply to releasing information to the public, not the Inspector General." BACKGROUND Following January 6, 2021, the DHS IG announced a review of the USSS, including but not limited to a review of the DHS Office of Intelligence & Analysis’s responsibility for providing intelligence to law enforcement, whether I&A fulfilled its responsibility, as well as DHS law enforcement components’ roles and actions on January 6, 2021. To read the full letter, click here. ### |