The Secret Service was charged in excess of the government-allowed rate when Eric Trump, the former president’s son and executive vice president of the Trump Organization, stayed in Washington, D.C. at the Trump-owned hotel with his wife Lara Trump, the House panel said. Citing new documents from the Secret Service, the Oversight Committee disclosed five stays at about three times the allowed rate.
When Donald Trump Jr. stayed at the Trump-owned hotel in Washington in 2017, the Secret Service was billed $1,185 a night, nearly six times the allowed per diem rate of $201 per night, according to the records released Monday. And when the then-president stayed at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida, the Secret Service detail was charged nightly rates that were “nearly double” the per diem rate, the records showed.
The revelations come as Maloney seeks more answers from the Secret Service about taxpayer dollars spent at Trump Organization properties. She suggested in her letter that the records received by the committee were an incomplete snapshot of the agency’s expenses.
Secret Service spokesperson Steve Kopek said in a statement the agency received Maloney’s letter and “will respond directly to the committee with the requested information.”
Her latest inquiry is part of a long-running Oversight Committee investigation into allegations Trump personally profited from the presidency and created potential conflicts of interest through the Trump Organization’s businesses. Maloney gave the Secret Service until Oct. 31 to produce more information, including a full list of Secret Service stays at Trump Organization properties, the total amount paid by the agency for each stay and the nightly rate paid, among other documents.
The panel argued the records that it has unearthed contradicted previous claims by Eric Trump that federal employees traveling with Donald Trump — such as Secret Service agents — would stay “for free” or “at cost.” The Secret Service is given the authority to exceed government rates because of its protective missions, but its employees are required to document the request by filling out a “variance request,” many of which the House panel obtained during its inquiry.
The Trump Organization did not immediately respond to requests for comment.