Mystery Of Cocaine In Biden’s White House Deepens After New Report
While corporate media remains obsessed with distracting headlines, a bombshell report quietly resurfaced this week — raising new and deeply troubling questions about former President Joe Biden, former Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle, and the integrity of the federal agencies tasked with protecting the White House.
At the center of the scandal: the infamous bag of cocaine discovered inside the Biden White House in July 2023. According to a new report by RealClearPolitics investigative journalist Susan Crabtree, the Secret Service moved swiftly to destroy the evidence — just one day after abruptly shutting down the case.
“A U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency document titled ‘Destruction’ states that the bag of cocaine was sent to the Metropolitan Police Department for incineration,” Crabtree wrote.
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View PlansBut that destruction document has no date. And internal Secret Service records paint a troubling picture of the timeline.
According to Crabtree’s investigation, the cocaine was tested by the Secret Service, FBI, and D.C. Fire Department hazmat technicians before being returned to Secret Service custody on July 12. Just two days later, it was sent to D.C. police for destruction. And by July 13, the case was officially closed.
There’s more: A senior official reportedly opposed the destruction of the cocaine — and may have faced retaliation for doing so. The order to proceed with evidence destruction came directly from Kimberly Cheatle, Biden’s handpicked Secret Service Director.
When pressed about what happened to the bag, D.C. police passed the blame to the FBI, saying it was no longer in their possession. And despite the DEA requirement that seized drugs be destroyed within 24 hours, there is no documentation proving the cocaine was ever incinerated.
No photos.
No timestamp.
No accountability.
This glaring lack of transparency has set off alarm bells across the country — and former FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino says that’s about to change.
“Well, I get a kick out of it on social media,” Bongino said. “People say, ‘This case isn’t a big deal. I don’t care.’ Well, I care. … You don’t care that a [potentially] hazardous substance made its way into the White House? We didn’t know what it was, and we don’t seem to have answers? Well, we’re going to get them. I’ve got a great team on it.”
The July 13 Secret Service statement claimed no leads or suspects could be identified. Spokesman Anthony Guglielmi asserted that the FBI’s lab analysis “did not develop latent fingerprints and insufficient evidence was present for investigative comparisons.”
But here’s the catch: Neither the Secret Service nor the FBI has ever released those lab results to the public.
And according to forensic experts, the only way to know whether viable DNA existed on the baggie would be to test it again.
“The only way to really tell, is to test it again and see what happens,” said Gary Clayton Harmor, chief forensic DNA analyst at the Serological Research Institute in California.
“The FBI, knowing them, they’re probably very conservative, and it may be that they said, ‘Nope, there’s not enough here to do anything meaningful with.’ It really depends on who’s doing the testing and how they did it,” Harmor said.
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View PlansIn other words, we may never know who brought cocaine into the Biden White House — not because the evidence failed, but because the institutions sworn to uphold the law destroyed the evidence and shut the door on accountability.
And now, those same agencies want Americans to simply forget.