INSURRECTION
FALLOUT
Secret Service official at center of Jan. 6
committee probe retires
Tony Ornato, who also served as a top aide in Donald
Trump’s White House, is the latest high-level official in the Secret Service to
announce his departure recently.
In a statement, Tony Ornato said he retired today “to
pursue a career in the private sector.” |
By KYLE
CHENEY
08/29/2022
06:54 PM EDT
Updated:
08/29/2022 07:57 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/08/29/secret-service-jan-6-probe-trump-00054127
Tony
Ornato, the senior Secret Service official who served as a top aide in Donald
Trump’s White House and faced scrutiny from the Jan. 6 select committee earlier
this summer, announced his retirement Monday.
The agency
confirmed Ornato’s retirement, which was announced internally earlier in the
day. He’s the latest high-level official in the Secret Service to announce his
departure in recent weeks. Spokesperson Anthony Guglielmi said Ornato — who
joined the Secret Service in 1997 — became eligible for retirement earlier this
year and leaves the agency in good standing.
Ornato’s
role in the Trump White House made national headlines after explosive testimony
by former Trump White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson, who said he had briefed
Trump and other White House officials about armed elements within Trump’s rally
crowd on the morning of Jan. 6, 2021.
Although
Ornato quickly signaled he was willing to testify in response to Hutchinson’s
account, he has yet to appear for a new interview with the select committee,
according to two people familiar with the discussions.
Asked about
the status of those discussion, Guglielmi said “We have continuously made Tony
Ornato available.” He noted, however, that Ornato is now a private citizen and
no longer a federal employee.
In a
statement, Ornato said he retired today “to pursue a career in the private
sector.”
“I retired
from the U.S. Secret Service after more than 25 years of faithful service to my
country, including serving the past five presidents,” he said. “I long-planned
to retire and have been planning this transition for more than a year.”
Ornato’s
departure comes shortly after the director of the Secret Service, James Murray,
announced his own intention to retire but put it on hold amid expanding
investigations into the agency’s conduct in the days surrounding the Capitol
attack.
The Department
of Homeland Security inspector general is investigating the deletion of
thousands of text messages by dozens of officials as part of what the agency
has described as a phone upgrade. Those missing messages include those sent on
and around Jan. 6.
Hutchinson
also indicated that it was Ornato who described to her a Jan. 6 altercation
between Trump and Robert Engel, the head of the then-president’s Secret Service
detail, in the presidential SUV. That encounter took place, according to
Hutchison, after Engel told Trump he could not travel to the Capitol with his
supporters.
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