Former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows broke open the White House cocaine mystery — and weighed in on whether he thought it belonged to troubled first son Hunter Biden.
Meadows had specific details on the location the drugs were found because of his knowledge of the White House’s workings.
He told Newsmax on Monday the cocaine was found in an area trafficked by “high-ranking officials” — the West Executive basement entryway of the West Wing. He said the location means it is possible the cocaine belongs to Hunter.
“During my time, a number of family members would have used this same door. They would actually come in and, if you’re visiting the Oval Office, it’s much quicker … than it would be to come through the East Wing or other areas,” Meadows said.
But Meadows admitted that while it’s possible the cocaine belongs to Hunter, odds say it’s more likely that the drug user was someone from within the White House staff.
“This is actually right outside the situation room, and … there is a Secret Service agent … within just a few feet of that through another double door,” Meadows said.
“We hear the White House saying, ‘Well, it was visitors, tourists.’ That is highly, highly improbable,” he said.
“Most of those, when you come for a tour, you actually have somebody along with you,” Meadows shared.
Conveniently, anonymous sources inside the White House claim it is very unlikely that the culprit would be found because of the volume of people that move through the area daily.
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“Even if there were surveillance cameras, unless you were waving it around, it may not have been caught,” an investigator reportedly told Politico. “It’s a bit of a thoroughfare. People walk by there all the time.”
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The Horn editorial team