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  • 2016-08-10 (xsd:date)
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  • Clinton's Secret Service Agent Holds Diazepam Pen (en)
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  • Conservative corners of the Internet were aflutter in August 2016 over claims that a Secret Service agent frequently spotted standing near Hillary Clinton at the Democratic National Convention was actually a doctor carrying a Diazepam pen in case the presidential nominee had a seizure. While these claims have proliferated quickly across social media, the evidence back them up is flimsy to non-existent. Author Mike Cernovich was one of the first to raise questions about Clinton's bodyguard when he posted images purportedly showing the agent's medic badge on Twitter: Fringe web sites such as the Ralph Retort the Conservative Treehouse and the Last Refuge have attempted to legitimize the doctor angle by asserting that Clinton's attendant might have been identified as Dr. Oladotun Okunola, such as when The Ralph Retort offered a confusing headline — REPORT: CLINTON’S HANDLER IDENTIFIED as Neurologist Dr. Oladotun Okunola? — that purposefully misled readers by emphasizing the salacious (but untrue) words CLINTON'S HANDLER IDENTIFIED then returning to lower case before inserting a skeptical question mark. A photographic comparison of Dr. Okunola and Clinton's attendant, however, reveals that they bear little resemblance to each other and are in fact two separate people: Hillary Clinton's handler is clealy not Dr. Oladotun Okunola, but is he a different doctor being explained away as a Secret Service agent? The evidence here is also pretty flimsy. The only real evidence offered for that hypothesis is a photograph of the agent's supposed medic lapel pin, but the image is too blurry to positively identify it. However, a side-by-side comparison of the agent's pin and a medic pin shows that they are not the same: The physician assistant pin is round (the agent's pin is not), has a black border (the agent's pin does not) and has a gold emblem in the center (the agent's pin does not). The agent's pin is most likely a red Secret Service pin, similar to the one pictured below: Furthermore, the doctor accompanying Hillary Clinton does not always wear the pin in question. Secret Service agents sometimes wear matching lapel pins at large events to help identify one another, but those lapel pins are frequently changed: The photograph below shows the agent wearing another pin, likely one commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Secret Service in 2015: Other web sites offered proof that the pictured man was not a Secret Service agent by maintaining that the Secret Service do not wear clearance badges: However, both the Democratic National Convention and Republican National Convention were classified as National Special Security Events (NSSE), which require special credentialing: Of course, the smoking gun to this theory is that the agent has purportedly been pictured carrying a Diazepam pen used to treat seizures: Again, this image is too blurry to positively identify the object in the agent's hand. However, a video of the agent using the above-pictured object shows that it is being used like a flashlight and not a Diazepam pen: Theories about a doctor being planted in the Secret Service to administer Diazepam in case Hillary Clinton has a seizure are based on mostly uninformed speculation about a few blurry photographs but no actual evidence. If some sort of medical cover-up were taking place, it's doubtful that the Secret Service doctor would wear a badge or pin identifying himself as a doctor, or that he would openly carry a Diazepam pen in plain sight. The Washington Post identified the above-pictured agent as Secret Service Assistant Special Agent in Charge Todd Madison but we have not been able to independently verify his identity. We've reached out to the Secret Service for additional information. (en)
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