Nyar

 

That is not the only fumble from this administration, we are just getting 
reports that the entire circus of intelligence about an organization planning 
to blow up places in Western country cities which was used to make the decision 
of attacking Syria, was actually a wrong intelligence and no one was planning 
to attack these cities. And a small voice says we are already there, we are 
already bombing and very innocent people are already dying.

 

That you for electing this man to white house. Thank you indeed !!!!!!

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni katika 
machafuko"

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of eun Nyaronyango
Sent: Monday, September 29, 2014 5:30 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: {UAH} Secret Service fumbled response after gunman hit White House 
residence in 2011

 


http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/secret-service-stumbled-after-gunman-hit-white-house-residence-in-2011/2014/09/27/d176b6ac-442a-11e4-b437-1a7368204804_story.html


Secret Service fumbled response after gunman hit White House residence in 2011



Law enforcement officers photograph a window at the White House in this Nov. 
16, 2011, file photo. A bullet shot at the house hit an exterior window of the 
White House and was stopped by ballistic glass, the Secret Service said at the 
time. (Haraz N. Ghanbari/AP)


By Carol D. Leonnig <http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/carol-d-leonnig>  
September 27


The gunman parked his black Honda directly south of the White House, in the 
dark of a November night, in a closed lane of Constitution Avenue. He pointed 
his semiautomatic rifle out of the passenger window, aimed directly at the home 
of the president of the United States, and pulled the trigger.
A bullet smashed a window on the second floor, just steps from the first 
family’s formal living room. Another lodged in a window frame, and more pinged 
off the roof, sending bits of wood and concrete to the ground. At least seven 
bullets struck the upstairs residence of the White House, flying some 700 yards 
across the South Lawn.
President Obama and his wife were out of town on that evening of Nov. 11, 2011, 
but their younger daughter, Sasha, and Michelle Obama’s mother, Marian Robinson 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/the-elusive-mrs-r-marian-robinson-the-white-houses-not-so-typical-live-in-grandma/2014/03/31/72f7547a-b6c1-11e3-a7c6-70cf2db17781_story.html>
 , were inside, while older daughter Malia was expected back any moment from an 
outing with friends.


Secret Service officers initially rushed to respond. One, stationed directly 
under the second-floor terrace where the bullets struck, drew her .357 handgun 
and prepared to crack open an emergency gun box. Snipers on the roof, standing 
just 20 feet from where one bullet struck, scanned the South Lawn through their 
rifle scopes for signs of an attack. With little camera surveillance on the 
White House perimeter, it was up to the Secret Service officers on duty to 
figure out what was going on.
Then came an order that surprised some of the officers. “No shots have been 
fired. . . . Stand down,” a supervisor called over his radio. He said the noise 
was the backfire from a nearby construction vehicle.



Secret Service fumbled response after gunman hit White House residence in 2011

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Secret Service fumbled response after gunman hit White House residence in 2011


 


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<http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/secret-service-stumbled-after-gunman-hit-white-house-residence-in-2011/2014/09/27/d176b6ac-442a-11e4-b437-1a7368204804_story.html>
 

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<http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/secret-service-stumbled-after-gunman-hit-white-house-residence-in-2011/2014/09/27/d176b6ac-442a-11e4-b437-1a7368204804_story.html>
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Law enforcement officers photograph a window at the White House in this Nov. 
16, 2011, file photo. A bullet shot at the house hit an exterior window of the 
White House and was stopped by ballistic glass, the Secret Service said at the 
time. (Haraz N. Ghanbari/AP) 

By Carol D. Leonnig <http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/carol-d-leonnig>  
September 27 

The gunman parked his black Honda directly south of the White House, in the 
dark of a November night, in a closed lane of Constitution Avenue. He pointed 
his semiautomatic rifle out of the passenger window, aimed directly at the home 
of the president of the United States, and pulled the trigger.
A bullet smashed a window on the second floor, just steps from the first 
family’s formal living room. Another lodged in a window frame, and more pinged 
off the roof, sending bits of wood and concrete to the ground. At least seven 
bullets struck the upstairs residence of the White House, flying some 700 yards 
across the South Lawn.
President Obama and his wife were out of town on that evening of Nov. 11, 2011, 
but their younger daughter, Sasha, and Michelle Obama’s mother, Marian Robinson 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/the-elusive-mrs-r-marian-robinson-the-white-houses-not-so-typical-live-in-grandma/2014/03/31/72f7547a-b6c1-11e3-a7c6-70cf2db17781_story.html>
 , were inside, while older daughter Malia was expected back any moment from an 
outing with friends.
Secret Service officers initially rushed to respond. One, stationed directly 
under the second-floor terrace where the bullets struck, drew her .357 handgun 
and prepared to crack open an emergency gun box. Snipers on the roof, standing 
just 20 feet from where one bullet struck, scanned the South Lawn through their 
rifle scopes for signs of an attack. With little camera surveillance on the 
White House perimeter, it was up to the Secret Service officers on duty to 
figure out what was going on.
Then came an order that surprised some of the officers. “No shots have been 
fired. . . . Stand down,” a supervisor called over his radio. He said the noise 
was the backfire from a nearby construction vehicle.

 <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/politics/white-house-shooting/>  
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/politics/white-house-shooting/> 
The night bullets hit the White House — and the Secret Service didn’t know View 
Graphic 

That command was the first of a string of security lapses, never previously 
reported, as the Secret Service failed to identify and properly investigate a 
serious attack on the White House. While the shooting and eventual arrest of 
the gunman, Oscar R. Ortega-Hernandez 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/crime-scene/post/oscar-ramiro-ortega-arrested-after-shots-fired-near-white-house/2011/11/16/gIQA6lznRN_blog.html>
 , received attention at the time, neither the bungled internal response nor 
the potential danger to the Obama daughters has been publicly known. This is 
the first full account of the Secret Service’s confusion and the missed clues 
in the incident — and the anger the president and first lady expressed as a 
result.


By the end of that Friday night, the agency had confirmed a shooting had 
occurred but wrongly insisted the gunfire was never aimed at the White House. 
Instead, Secret Service supervisors theorized, gang members in separate cars 
got in a gunfight near the White House’s front lawn — an unlikely scenario in a 
relatively quiet, touristy part of the nation’s capital.
It took the Secret Service four days to realize that shots had hit the White 
House residence, a discovery that came about only because a housekeeper noticed 
broken glass and a chunk of cement on the floor.
This report is based on interviews with agents, investigators and other 
government officials with knowledge about the shooting. The Washington Post 
also reviewed hundreds of pages of documents, including transcripts of 
interviews with officers on duty that night, and listened to audio recordings 
of in-the-moment law enforcement radio transmissions.


Secret Service spokesman Ed Donovan declined to comment. A spokesman for the 
White House also declined to comment.
The episode exposed problems at multiple levels of the Secret Service, and it 
demonstrates that an organization long seen by Americans as an elite force of 
selfless and highly skilled patriots — willing to take a bullet for the good of 
the country — is not always up to its job.
Just this month, a man carrying a knife was able to jump the White House fence 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/new-details-in-fence-jumping-reveal-failures-in-security-rings-around-white-house/2014/09/23/043518ea-434a-11e4-b47c-f5889e061e5f_story.html>
  and sprint into the front door. The agency was also embarrassed by a 2012 
prostitution scandal in Cartagena, Colombia, 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/us-secret-service-agents-recalled-from-colombia/2012/04/13/gIQAEdW9FT_story.html>
  that revealed what some called a wheels-up, rings-off culture in which some 
agents treated presidential trips as an opportunity to party.


The actions of the Secret Service in the minutes, hours and days that followed 
the 2011 shooting were particularly problematic. Officers who were on the scene 
who thought gunfire had probably hit the house that night were largely ignored, 
and some were afraid to dispute their bosses’ conclusions. Nobody conducted 
more than a cursory inspection of the White House for evidence or damage. Key 
witnesses were not interviewed until after bullets were found.
Moreover, the suspect was able to park his car on a public street, take several 
shots and then speed off without being detected. It was sheer luck that the 
shooter was identified, the result of Ortega, a troubled and jobless 
21-year-old, wrecking his car seven blocks away and leaving his gun inside.
The response infuriated the president and the first lady, according to people 
with direct knowledge of their reaction. Michelle Obama has spoken publicly 
about fearing for her family’s safety since her husband 

became the nation’s first black president. Her concerns are well founded — 
President Obama has faced three times as many threats as his predecessors, 
according to people briefed on the Secret Service’s threat assessment.
“It was obviously very frightening that someone who didn’t really plan it that 
well was able to shoot and hit the White House and people here did not know it 
until several days later,” said William Daley, who was White House chief of 
staff at the time.
Daley said he recalls the late discovery of the bullets shaking up the Obamas 
and their staffs. The Secret Service could not have prevented the shooting, 
Daley said, but it should have determined more quickly what happened.

“The handling of this was not good,” he said.

Confusion after shots

By the time Ortega shot at the White House, President Obama and the first lady 
were in San Diego on their way to Hawaii for the Veterans Day weekend.
With the first couple gone, the Secret Service staff at the White House slipped 
into what some termed a “casual Friday” mode.
By 8:30 p.m., most of the Secret Service agents and officers on duty were 
coming to the tail end of a quiet shift.
An undercover agent in charge of monitoring the White House perimeter for 
suspicious activity, McClellan Plihcik, had left with a more junior officer to 
fill up his service car at a gas station about a mile away.
On the White House’s southern border, a few construction workers were milling 
about. D.C. Water trucks, arriving on Constitution Avenue to clean sewer lines, 
had just parked in the lane closed off by red cones on the White House side of 
the street.
It was near that spot that Ortega pulled over his black 1998 Honda Accord.
Ortega had left his Idaho home about three weeks earlier, during a time his 
friends said he had been acting increasingly paranoid. He kept launching into 
tirades about the U.S. government trying to control its citizens, saying 
President Obama “had to be stopped.”
He had arrived in Washington on Nov. 9. He had 180 rounds of ammunition and a 
Romanian-made Cugir semiautomatic rifle, similar to an AK-47, that he had 
purchased at an Idaho gun shop.
Now, in striking distance of the president’s home, Ortega raised his weapon. A 
woman in a taxi stopped at a nearby stoplight immediately took to Twitter to 
describe the actions of “this crazy guy.”


“Driver in front of my cab, STOPPED and fired 5 gun shots at the White House,” 
she wrote, adding, “It took the police a while to respond.”
Another witness — a visiting neuroscientist who was riding by in an airport 
shuttle van — later told investigators he had seen a man shooting out of a car 
toward the White House.
On the rooftop of the White House, Officers Todd Amman and Jeff Lourinia heard 
six to eight shots in quick succession, likely semiautomatic fire, they 
thought. They scurried out of their shedlike booth, readied their rifles and 
scanned the southern fence line.
Under the Truman Balcony, the second-floor terrace off the residence that 
overlooks the Washington Monument, Secret Service Officer Carrie Johnson heard 
shots and what she thought was debris falling overhead. 

She drew her handgun and took cover, then heard a radio call reporting 
“possible shots fired” near the south grounds. Johnson called the Secret 
­Service’s joint operations center, at the agency’s headquarters on H Street 
Northwest, to report she was breaking into the gun box near her post, pulling 
out a shotgun. She replaced the buckshot inside with a more powerful slug in 
case she needed to engage an attacker.
The shots were fired about 15 yards away from Officers William Johnson and 
Milton Olivo, who were sitting in a Chevrolet Suburban on the Ellipse near 
Constitution Avenue.
They could smell acrid gunpowder as they jumped out of their vehicle, hearts 
pounding. Johnson took cover behind some flowerpots. Olivo grabbed a shotgun 
from the Suburban’s back seat and crouched by the vehicle.


William Johnson noticed a curious clue as he crouched in the crisp autumn air — 
leaves had been blown away in a line-like pattern, perhaps by air from a 
firearm muzzle. It created a path of exposed grass pointing from Constitution 
Avenue north toward the White House.
Then another call came over the radio from a supervising sergeant — the one 
ordering agents to stand down.
The call led to some confusion and surprise, especially for officers who felt 
sure they had heard shots. Nevertheless, many complied, holstering their guns 
and turning back to their posts.
But William Johnson knew shots were fired and got on his radio to say so. 
“Flagship,” he said, using the code name for the command center, “shots fired.”
Ortega, meanwhile, was driving away “like a maniac,” the woman in the cab wrote 
on Twitter.


He was speeding down Constitution Avenue toward the Potomac River at about 60 
mph, according to witnesses.
Ortega narrowly missed striking a couple crossing the street before he swerved 
and crashed his car.
Three women walking nearby heard the crash, and one called 911 on a cellphone. 
As they walked closer to the scene, the women saw the Honda spun around, 
headlights glaring at oncoming traffic, half on the on-ramp to the Roosevelt 
Bridge carrying Interstate 66 into Virginia. The driver’s-side door was flung 
open. The radio was blaring. The driver was gone.
At the same time, Park Police and Secret Service patrol cars were beginning to 
swarm the bridge area. Nestled in the driver console was a semiautomatic 
assault rifle, with nine shell casings on the floor and seat.

Plihcik, the special agent who had been gassing up his patrol car, was among 
those arriving on the scene. A homeless man told him he had seen a young white 
male running from the vehicle after the crash and heading toward the Georgetown 
area.
Amid conflicting radio chatter, including a Secret Service dispatcher calling 
into 911 with contradictory descriptions of vehicles and suspects, police began 
looking for the wrong people: two black men supposedly fleeing down Rock Creek 
Parkway.
The man who had shot at the White House had disappeared on foot into the 
Washington night, with the Secret Service still trying to piece together what 
he had done.

Fear for girls’ safety

Back in the White House, key people in charge of the safety of the president’s 
family were not initially aware that a shooting had occurred.


Because officers guarding the White House grounds communicate on a different 
radio frequency from the one used by agents who protect the first family, the 
agent assigned to Sasha learned of the shooting a few minutes later from an 
officer posted nearby.
The White House usher on duty, whose job is tending to the first family’s 
needs, got delayed word as well. She immediately began to worry about Malia, 
who was supposed to be arriving any minute. The usher told the staff to keep 
Sasha and her grandmother inside. Malia arrived with her detail at 9:40 p.m., 
and all doors were locked for the night.
The Secret Service’s watch commander on duty, Capt. David Simmons, had been 
listening to the confusing radio chatter since the first reports of possible 
shots.


When word came of the wrecked Honda, Simmons left the command center and drove 
to the scene at the foot of the Roosevelt Bridge.
It was up to Simmons to decide whether the events of that night appeared to be 
an attack on the White House. After consulting with investigators and calling 
his bosses at home to confer, he turned the case over to the U.S. Park Police, 
the agency with jurisdiction over the grounds near the White House.
In effect, the Secret Service had concluded there was no evidence linking the 
shooting to the White House.
U.S. Park Police spokesman David Schlosser told reporters at the time that the 
connection was a big coincidence. “The thing that makes it of interest is 
simply the location, you know, a bit like real estate,” he said.
At the time of the shooting, President Obama had been sitting courtside on the 
USS Carl Vinson warship in the California’s Coronado Bay, watching the 
University of North Carolina and Michigan State University basketball teams 
play on the flight deck. He was getting ready to be interviewed by ESPN at 9 
p.m.

Forty-five minutes later, the president and Michelle Obama climbed aboard Air 
Force One, bound for a trade summit in Hono­lulu, unaware that a man had taken 
several shots at their living quarters.

Housekeeper’s discovery

The next day, things seemed to have settled down at the White House.
Officer Carrie Johnson, who had heard debris fall from the Truman Balcony the 
night before, listened during the roll call before her shift Saturday afternoon 
as supervisors explained that the gunshots were from people in two cars 
shooting at each other.


Johnson had told several senior officers Friday night that she thought the 
house had been hit. But on Saturday she did not challenge her superiors, “for 
fear of being criticized,” she later told investigators.
Though the Park Police was now in charge of the investigation, Secret Service 
agents continued to assist, using social media and other sources to locate 
witnesses, such as the tweeting taxi passenger, and people who knew Ortega.
Investigators did not issue a national lookout to notify law enforcement that 
Ortega was wanted. If they had, Ortega could have been arrested that Saturday 
in Arlington County, Va., where police responded to a call about a man behaving 
oddly in a local park. They questioned Ortega but had no idea he was a suspect 
in a shooting, and they let him go.
The Park Police did not obtain a warrant for Ortega on weapons charges until 
that Sunday. A Park Police spokeswoman, reached this Friday, declined to 
comment, saying the agency needed more time to review the episode.
Meanwhile, Secret Service agents, who had been learning from Ortega’s friends 
and family that he was obsessed with President Obama, began canvassing the D.C. 
area to locate him.
The situation at the White House remained quiet until Tuesday morning. 
President Obama was continuing from Hawaii to Australia. But the first lady had 
returned to Washington on an overnight flight. She had gone upstairs to take a 
nap shortly after arriving home early that morning.
Flying back on her plane was Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan. At that 
time, his agents were learning that Ortega, still at large, appeared to be 
obsessed with the president. The episode had not yet risen to the level of a 
confirmed threat that the Secret Service would share with the first couple, 
according to people familiar with agency practice.


Reginald Dickson, an assistant White House usher, had come to work early to 
prepare the house for the first lady.
Around noon, a housekeeper asked Dickson to come to the Truman Balcony, where 
she showed him the broken window and a chunk of white concrete on the floor.
Dickson saw the bullet hole and cracks in the antique glass of a center window, 
with the intact bulletproof glass on the inside. Dickson spotted a dent in 
another window sill that turned out to be a bullet lodged in the wood.
Dickson called the Secret Service agent in charge of the complex.
Suddenly, Ortega was no longer just a man who had abandoned a car with a rifle 
inside. He was now a suspect in an assassination attempt on the president of 
the United States — and he was about to become the target of a national 
manhunt. Daley, the White House chief of staff, was alerted by aides about the 
discovery on the second floor of the residence.
The first lady was still napping, and Daley and his aides knew it was their job 
to tell her. They debated whether they should wake her up and give her the news.
They decided, according to people familiar with the discussions, to let her 
sleep. Instead, they concluded, they would brief the president and let him tell 
his wife.
But someone else told her first.



First lady furious

Dickson, the usher, went upstairs to the third floor to see how Michelle Obama 
was doing.
He assumed she knew about the bullets and began describing the discovery.
But she was aghast — and then quickly furious. She wondered why Sullivan had 
not mentioned anything about it during their long flight back together from 
Hawaii, according to people familiar with the first lady’s reaction. 



That afternoon, Secret Service investigators for the first time began 
interviewing officers and agents who had been on the grounds the previous 
Friday night.
Authorities put out an all-points bulletin for Ortega and circulated his 
picture. Local police officers up and down the Eastern Seaboard were tasked 
with checking train and bus stations.
A team of FBI agents met early that evening to plan for taking over the 
investigation and securing the crime scene at the White House.
At 7:45 a.m. the next day, FBI agents arrived at the White House complex.
They interviewed some of the Secret Service officers who were on duty that 
Friday night and scoured the Truman Balcony and nearby grounds for casings, 
bullet fragments and other evidence. The agents that day found $97,000 worth of 
damage.
At that same time, state troopers were headed to a Hampton Inn in Indiana, Pa. 
A desk clerk, on alert after Secret Service agents found out Ortega had stayed 
there and circulated his picture, called police after recognizing the man with 
a distinctive tattoo on his neck. They arrested Ortega and kept him chained at 
his feet and hands in a holding cell until FBI agents could arrive to question 
him. Back at the White House, Michelle Obama was worried about how the scene of 
agents on the family balcony might upset her daughters. She relayed a special 
request that the FBI team finish their work on the balcony by 2:35 p.m., before 
Sasha and Malia came home from school.
The first lady was still upset when her husband arrived home five days later 
from Australia. The president was fuming, too, former aides said. Not only had 
their aides failed to immediately alert the first lady, but the Secret Service 
had stumbled in its response.

“When the president came back . . . then the s--- really hit the fan,” said one 
former aide.
Tensions were high when Sullivan was called to the White House for a meeting 
about the incident. Michelle Obama addressed him in such a sharp and raised 
voice that she could be heard through a closed door, according to people 
familiar with the exchange. Among her many questions: How did they miss bullets 
from an assault rifle lodged in the walls of her home?
Sullivan disputed this account of the meeting but declined to characterize the 
encounter, saying he does not discuss conversations with the first lady.

Problems exposedOrtega was eventually charged with attempted assassination. His 
attorneys insisted he had no idea what he was doing. He pleaded guilty to 
slightly lesser charges and was sentenced to 25 years in prison 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/crime/judge-sentences-idaho-man-to-25-years-for-shooting-at-white-house/2014/03/31/23a31732-b91f-11e3-96ae-f2c36d2b1245_story.html>
 .
The next year, the Colombia prostitution scandal rocked the agency’s 
reputation. Sullivan retired from the agency in 2013 to start a private 
security firm. President Obama named the first woman to head the service, Julia 
Pierson 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/obama-names-julia-pierson-as-new-secret-service-director/2013/03/26/82936666-9652-11e2-8b4e-0b56f26f28de_story.html>
 , with hopes she could help end Cartagena-like embarrassments.
Yet, on Capitol Hill and among many former Secret Service officials, the 2011 
shooting was a sign of far deeper troubles. For them, no duty is more sacred 
than protecting the life of the president and his family, and on this night a 
man nearly got away with shooting into his house. In this case, they fear, a 
more powerful weapon might have pierced the residence, or the Obama daughters 
could have been on the balcony.
“This is symptomatic of an organization that is not moving in the right 
direction,” Rep. Jason Chaffetz (Utah), a leading Republican on the House 
Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said in an interview. The committee, 
which oversees the Secret Service, has invited the director to testify at a 
Tuesday hearing on security issues.
A subsequent internal security review found that the incident illustrated 
serious gaps.
The Secret Service, for instance, could not use any of the dozens of 
ShotSpotter 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/shotspotter-detection-system-documents-39000-shooting-incidents-in-the-district/2013/11/02/055f8e9c-2ab1-11e3-8ade-a1f23cda135e_story.html>
  sensors installed across the city to help police pinpoint and trace gunshots. 
The closest sensor was more than a mile away, too far to track Ortega’s shots.


Sullivan acknowledged in closed congressional briefings that the agency lacked 
basic camera surveillance that could have helped agents see the attack and 
swarm the gunman immediately.
Some of the technology issues have since been addressed, according to 
officials. The agency added a series of surveillance cameras in 2012, giving 
authorities a full view of the perimeter.

 

Alice Crites and Julie Tate contributed to this report.

 

 

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