Early years Following the Civil War, counterfeiting of U.S. currency was a problem.
Abraham Lincoln established a commission to make recommendations to remedy the problem. According to a Clinton White House archive, the day that Abraham Lincoln signed the approval of starting the Secret Service, Lincoln was shot. The Secret Service was later established on July 5, 1865, in
Washington, D.C., Chief
William P. Wood was sworn in by
Secretary of the Treasury Hugh McCulloch. It was commissioned in
Washington, D.C., as the "Secret Service Division" of the Department of the Treasury with the mission of suppressing counterfeiting. At the time, the only other federal law enforcement agencies were the
U.S. Post Office Department's Office of Instructions and Mail Depredations (originally created by the first
postmaster general Benjamin Franklin in 1772 as the position of surveyor and becoming an agency in 1830, now known as the
United States Postal Inspection Service since 1954),
United States Customs Service (formed July 31, 1789), the
United States Marshals Service (formed September 24, 1789) and the
United States Park Police (originally formed in 1791 as the Park Watchman by
George Washington & becoming the Park Police on December 14, 1919). In 1867 Secret Service responsibilities were broadened to include "detecting persons perpetrating frauds against the government" with them investigating the
Ku Klux Klan, illegal
distillers,
smugglers, mail theft and land fraud. In 1902,
William Craig became the first Secret Service agent to die while on duty, in a road accident while riding in the presidential carriage. The Secret Service was the first U.S. domestic intelligence and counterintelligence agency. Domestic intelligence collection and counterintelligence responsibilities were later vested in the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
Taft Mexican Summit (1909) In 1909, President
William H. Taft agreed to meet with Mexican president
Porfirio Díaz in
El Paso, Texas, and
Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, the first meeting between a U.S. and a Mexican president and also the first time an American president visited Mexico. The historic summit resulted in serious assassination threats and other security concerns for the nascent Secret Service, so the
Texas Rangers, 4,000 U.S. and Mexican troops,
BOI agents, U.S. Marshals, and an additional 250-man private security detail led by
Frederick Russell Burnham, the celebrated scout, were all called in by Chief
John Wilkie to provide added security. On October 16, the day of the summit, Burnham discovered a man holding a concealed
palm pistol standing at the El Paso Chamber of Commerce building along the procession route. The man was captured and disarmed only a few feet from Díaz and Taft.
1920s The first unofficial female special agent was Florence Bolan. She joined the service in 1917.
1940s The Secret Service assisted in arresting Japanese American leaders and in the
Japanese American internment during
World War II.
1950s In 1950, President
Harry S. Truman was residing in
Blair House while the White House, across the street, was undergoing renovations. On November 1, 1950, two
Puerto Rican nationalists,
Oscar Collazo and
Griselio Torresola, approached Blair House with the intent to
assassinate President Truman. Collazo and Torresola opened fire on Private
Leslie Coffelt and other White House Police officers. Though mortally wounded by three shots from a
9 mm German
Luger to his chest and abdomen, Private Coffelt returned fire, killing Torresola with a single shot to his head. Collazo was also shot, but survived his injuries and served 29 years in prison before returning to Puerto Rico in late 1979. Coffelt is the only member of the Secret Service killed while protecting a US president against an assassination attempt (Special Agent
Tim McCarthy stepped in front of President
Ronald Reagan during the
assassination attempt of March 30, 1981, and took a bullet to the chest but made a full recovery).
1960s In 1968, as a result of
Robert F. Kennedy's assassination, Congress authorized protection of major presidential and vice presidential candidates and nominees. In 1965 and 1968, Congress also authorized lifetime protection of the spouses of deceased presidents unless they remarry and of the children of former presidents until age 16.
1970s In 1970, Phyllis Shantz became the first female officer sworn into the
United States Secret Service Uniformed Division, then called the Executive Protective Service. In 1971, the first five official female Special Agents were sworn in - Laurie Anderson, Sue Baker, Kathryn Clark, Holly Hufschmidt, and Phyllis Shantz.
1980s In 1984, the US Congress passed the
Comprehensive Crime Control Act, which extended the Secret Service's jurisdiction over credit card fraud and computer fraud.
1990s In 1990, the Secret Service initiated
Operation Sundevil, which they originally intended as a sting against malicious
hackers, allegedly responsible for disrupting telephone services across the entire United States. The operation, which was later described by
Bruce Sterling in his book
The Hacker Crackdown, affected a great number of people unrelated to hacking, and led to no convictions. The Secret Service, however, was sued and required to pay damages. On March 1, 1990, the Secret Service served a search warrant on
Steve Jackson Games, a small company in
Austin, Texas, seizing three computers and over 300 floppy disks. In the subsequent lawsuit, the judge reprimanded the Secret Service, calling their warrant preparation "sloppy." In 1994 and 1995, it ran an undercover sting called
Operation Cybersnare. The Secret Service has concurrent jurisdiction with the FBI over certain violations of federal computer crime laws. They have created 24 Electronic Crimes Task Forces (ECTFs) across the United States. These task forces are partnerships between the service, federal/state and local law enforcement, the private sector and academia aimed at combating technology-based crimes. In 1998, President
Bill Clinton signed
Presidential Decision Directive 62, which established
National Special Security Events (NSSE). That directive made the Secret Service responsible for security at designated events. In 1999, the United States Secret Service Memorial Building was dedicated in DC, granting the agency its first headquarters. Prior to this, the agency's different departments were based in office space around the DC area. The
General Services Administration acquired the United States Secret Service Memorial Building's adjoining property, the
Webster School, for the Secret Service.
21st century 2000s September 11 attacks The New York City Field office was located at
7 World Trade Center. Immediately after the
World Trade Center was attacked as part of the
September 11 attacks, Special Agents and other New York Field office employees were among the first to respond with first aid. 67 Special Agents in New York City, at and near the New York Field Office, helped to set up
triage areas and evacuate the towers. One Secret Service employee, Master Special Officer Craig Miller, died during the rescue efforts. On August 20, 2002, Director
Brian L. Stafford awarded the Director's Valor Award to employees who assisted in the rescue attempts.
Domestic expansion Effective March 1, 2003, the Secret Service transferred from the Treasury to the newly established Department of Homeland Security. The
USA Patriot Act, signed into law by President
George W. Bush on October 26, 2001, mandated the Secret Service to establish a nationwide network of ECTFs in addition to the one already active in New York. As such, this mandate expanded on the agency's first ECTF—the New York Electronic Crimes Task Force, formed in 1995—which brought together federal, state and local law enforcement, prosecutors, private-industry companies, and academia. These bodies collectively provide necessary support and resources to field investigations that meet any one of the following criteria: significant economic or community impact; participation of organized criminal groups involving multiple districts or transnational organizations; or use of schemes involving new technology. The network prioritizes investigations that meet the following criteria: • Significant economic or community impact, • Participation of multiple-district or transnational organized criminal groups, • Use of new technology as a means to commit crime. Investigations conducted by ECTFs include crimes such as computer generated counterfeit currency; bank fraud; virus and worm proliferation; access device fraud; telecommunications fraud; Internet threats; computer system intrusions and cyberattacks; phishing/spoofing; assistance with Internet-related child pornography and exploitation; and identity theft.
International expansion On July 6, 2009, the U.S. Secret Service expanded its fight on
cybercrime by creating the first
European Electronic Crime Task Force, based on the successful U.S. domestic model, through a memorandum of understanding with Italian police and postal officials. Over a year later, on August 9, 2010, the agency expanded its European involvement by creating its second overseas ECTF in the
United Kingdom. Both task forces are said to concentrate on a wide range of "computer-based criminal activity," including: •
Identity theft •
Network intrusions • Other computer-related crimes affecting financial and other critical infrastructures.
2010s In September 2014, the United States Secret Service came under criticism following two high-profile incidents involving intruders at the White House.
One such intruder entered the East Room of the White House through an unlocked door. In 2017, it was reported that the United States Secret Service is able to decode
printer tracking dots.
2020s On April 15, 2020, the ICE Homeland Security Investigations unit launched "Operation Stolen Promise" that targets
COVID-19 related
fraud. The operation conscripted resources from various branches of law enforcement and the government, including the U.S. Secret Service. About $2 trillion in the relief package known as the
CARES Act were earmarked by law in March 2020, bringing
unemployment benefits and loans to millions of Americans. However, as Secret Service spokesmen subsequently pointed out, the Act also opened up opportunities for criminals to fraudulently apply for aid. By the end of 2021, nearly two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, the Secret Service had seized more than $1.2 billion in relief funds appropriated by fraudsters. On June 1, 2020, during a peaceful protest outside
Lafayette Square, the U.S. Secret Service acted contrary to an operational plan and began advancing seven minutes before U.S. Park Police gave any dispersal warnings. but
Joseph Cuffari, the Department of Homeland Security Inspector General, prevented career officials from investigating the role U.S. Secret Service played in the Trump administration’s controversial use of force to remove protesters that day. In August 2020, a Secret Service officer shot a man once in the chest at the corner of 17th Street and Pennsylvania during one of then-President Trump’s press conferences. The president was evacuated but returned later and told the White House press corps that the man had a gun. However, according to court documents, the man was actually holding a comb, told the officers he was armed and took a shooting stance before being shot. The man is schizophrenic and was charged with simple assault of a law enforcement officer. A day before the
January 6 United States Capitol attack in 2021, the Secret Service warned
Capitol Police of threats of violence that Capitol Police officers could face violence at the hands of supporters of President
Donald Trump. On January 6, Secret Service agents provided security in and around the
United States Capitol, as well as evacuating Vice President
Mike Pence during the riot. Testimony in Congress indicates Pence was concerned his security detail would remove him from the Capitol, stopping him from completing his duty to oversee the final count of electoral college votes. At the center of the controversy surrounding the Secret Service and January 6 investigations is
Anthony M. Ornato, who had been the head of Trump's security detail, but took the unprecedented step of leaving the Secret Service to become deputy White House chief of staff and becoming a "key part of Trump’s effort to get reelected." The Secret Service assisted in the seizure of hacker forum
RaidForums in 2022. In April 2022, four Secret Service agents, one of whom was assigned to First Lady
Jill Biden, were placed on leave after accepting lavish gifts, rent free apartments, and other bribes from two men ultimately convicted of impersonating federal officers. On August 24, 2022, President
Joe Biden named
Kimberly Cheatle, the senior director of global security at
PepsiCo, as the agency's new director. Cheatle was in the Secret Service for 27 years and became the first woman to serve as assistant director of protective operations, a department tasked with protecting the president and dignitaries. On November 12, 2023, a Secret Service agent guarding
Naomi Biden fired shots at three people seen breaking into an unoccupied government vehicle in
Georgetown. On July 13, 2024, Secret Service agents protecting former President
Donald Trump at a campaign rally in
Butler, Pennsylvania in advance of his presumptive
Republican candidacy in the
2024 United States presidential election, shot and killed
Thomas Matthew Crooks during an
assassination attempt on Trump. Crooks, armed with an
AR-15–style rifle, had shot at Trump from an elevated position near the venue. Trump was injured in his right ear and quickly rushed to hospital, while Crooks was killed by a Secret Service counter-sniper. One other attendee, 50-year-old Corey Comperatore, was also killed by Crooks and several others in attendance were injured. On July 23, 2024,
Kimberly Cheatle resigned from her position as the director of the Secret Service just one day after she testified before the
United States House Committee on Oversight and Accountability about the assassination attempt and acknowledged it was "the most significant operational failure at the Secret Service in decades". ==Attacks on presidents==