Report: Secret Service Ordered Immediate Destruction of Cocaine Found In Biden White House
Two years after a bag of cocaine was discovered inside the White House, new revelations are reigniting concerns over what appears to be a suspiciously swift effort to eliminate critical evidence — and now, under President Donald J. Trump’s renewed leadership, the case is once again under federal scrutiny.
According to RealClearPolitics, a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration document titled “Destruction” confirms that the cocaine was quietly handed over to the Metropolitan Police Department for incineration, without any specified destruction date. The document, obtained through a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, raises eyebrows over the lack of transparency and documentation.
Internal Secret Service records further reveal that the white powder was tested by multiple agencies — including the D.C. Fire Department’s hazmat team, the FBI, and the Secret Service itself — before being stored briefly in Secret Service custody. By July 14, just two days later, the bag was transferred to D.C. police for destruction — a stunningly fast turnaround in a case involving illicit drugs inside the most secure building in the world.
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View PlansDespite official procedures requiring rigorous tracking and oversight of narcotics evidence, there is no record showing the exact date the cocaine was destroyed. D.C. police refused to comment, referring all inquiries to the FBI. The mystery deepens as no public documentation confirms the physical destruction of the evidence.
But the story doesn’t end there.
Last week, in a significant move under the Trump administration, FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino announced the reopening of three major investigations that were left unresolved — including the White House cocaine incident, the Supreme Court Dobbs leak, and the pipe bomb left outside DNC headquarters on January 6, 2021.
In an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, Bongino, a former Secret Service agent, didn’t hold back.
“Well, I get a kick out of it on social media,” he 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.”
Though the original bag may be gone, not all evidence was destroyed.
According to Secret Service logs, a separate envelope containing three DNA collection tubes — collected by the FBI from the cocaine bag — was preserved and remains in agency custody. However, it remains unclear how much DNA was actually obtained.
At the time, the Secret Service dismissed the case, claiming that surveillance footage yielded no “investigative leads” and that FBI lab analysis turned up “no latent fingerprints and insufficient evidence… for investigative comparisons.” Those FBI results, notably, have never been made public.
Forensic experts contacted by RealClearPolitics say the only way to confirm whether the DNA could yield matches to national databases would be to re-test the sample — an impossibility if the bag is indeed destroyed.
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View PlansEven more damning: sources familiar with the investigation told the outlet that surveillance footage clearly shows individuals entering through the West Wing entrance, where the cocaine was found. Yet, the Secret Service reportedly never interviewed those individuals, pointing to the supposed lack of actionable DNA evidence.
With the Trump administration bringing a renewed commitment to transparency and law enforcement accountability, this case may finally get the answers the American people deserve — answers that were suspiciously buried under the Biden-era bureaucratic rug.