Security review launched after White House breach

Security review launched after White House breach

The US Secret Service said Saturday it has launched a comprehensive review of White House security procedures after an intruder scaled a fence, sprinted across the lawn and entered the presidential residence.

A member of the US Secret Service stands watch near Air Force One prior to departing from Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland on August 26, 2014

The White House -- the president's workplace and home -- is generally regarded as one of the most secure and protected places on the planet.

All the more troubling, Secret Service officials said, that the fence jumper, identified as Omar Gonzalez, had entered the building unimpeded late Friday.

"Although last night the officers showed tremendous restraint and discipline in dealing with this subject, the location of Gonzalez's arrest is not acceptable," said the statement released by the Secret Service late Saturday, noting that he was restrained only after entering the White House North Portico doors.

An agency within the Department of Homeland Security, the Secret Service is tasked with protecting America's highest elected officials and visiting foreign officials, and securing events of national significance.

But the service in charge of security for America's commander in chief has also been dogged with scandals and mishaps in recent years.

The investigation was ordered by Secret Service Director Julia Pierson, whose office said that the review's findings would be submitted to DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson.

The Secret Service said the review began late Friday, with a physical assessment of the site and personnel interviews, and would encompass "all operational policies and security procedures during this process."

In the interim, Pierson has "ordered the immediate enhancement of officer patrols and surveillance capabilities along the Pennsylvania Avenue fence line around the White House complex," the statement said.

President Barack Obama and his family were not home at the time, though officials and journalists were rushed out of the building during the evening disturbance.

Minutes earlier, the first family had left by helicopter from the South Lawn headed for Camp David, the presidential weekend retreat, and were still there on Saturday, officials said.

- A trespasser arrested -

The announcement of the internal Secret Service probe came the same day as a second, less serious incident, when a man was arrested at the White House and charged with trespassing.

Secret Service spokesman Brian Leary told AFP that a man was placed under arrest when he turned up in his car a short time after being denied entrance at a pedestrian access point.

The man had originally approached a gate on the northwest side of the White House on foot but "was sent on his way by our uniformed division," Leary said.

However, he later tried to gain access to the vehicle entrance point on another side of the White House.

"He doesn't hit the barriers, he gets out of his vehicle, he's compliant -- but he was in a restricted area and he was told not to be there, so he was arrested," said Leary.

"He was charged with unlawful entry," Leary said, adding that the individual, Kevin Carr of Shamong, New Jersey, was subsequently transferred to the custody of local District of Columbia police.

Compared to the security breach one day earlier, officials said Saturday's incident was a relatively minor affair.

"This is an everyday occurrence," another Secret Service spokesman, Ed Donovan, told AFP, adding that at no point did Carr attempt to enter White House grounds.

"It's being overblown," he said, as US media quickly ramped up coverage of the incident.

The attention also comes after several embarrassing incidents for the agency.

In March, three agents were sent home from Amsterdam after a night of drinking, with one found passed out in a hotel hallway.

And in 2012, a dozen agents and officers drank heavily and brought prostitutes to their hotel in the Colombian Caribbean resort of Cartagena before the president's arrival for an economy summit.

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