[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 35, Number 41 (Monday, October 18, 1999)]
[Pages 2048-2050]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at the Dedication of the United States Secret Service Memorial 
Building

October 14, 1999

    Thank you very much, Secretary Summers, Director Stafford, 
Commissioner Peck, Monsignor Vaghi, Ms. Worley, Congressman Kolbe and 
Congressman Hoyer, Sergeant at Arms Livingood, Mr. Berger, Secretary 
Johnson. And I especially appreciate the presence of three former 
Directors of the Secret Service here today, Eljay Bowron and John Magaw 
and Stu Knight. I thank them for coming.
    I thank the Marines for giving us such wonderful music today. Didn't 
they do a great job? [Applause.] Thank you. I think that's the only 
thing I'm going to miss more

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than Air Force One when I'm gone, having music everywhere I go, provided 
by the Marines. [Laughter]
    I wanted to be here for a number of reasons today. At first, I just 
wanted to look out and see some friendly faces. I just finished a press 
conference. [Laughter] It's nice to do that. I wanted to see this 
beautiful building, and I knew I would be given the experience of seeing 
this beautiful building. I want to thank Larry Cockell for letting me 
come in the front door today. [Laughter] You know, usually when I go 
into a building the Secret Service makes me go into an underground 
parking garage, past all the garbage--[laughter]--up the service 
elevator. You think--the last time I went to the Hilton here, I have 
been in the service entrance so much that they had an employee in every 
section of the Hilton Hotel, in every part of--[inaudible]--they met me 
when I came in, and they gave me a laminated employee ID card. 
[Laughter] Just something else I owe to the Secret Service.
    I also was hoping that I might get another invitation to try out 
some more of the Secret Service training that I got at Beltsville, with 
Hillary, a couple of years ago. We're still looking for that escape pod 
on Air Force One. We haven't found that yet. [Laughter]
    I want to also say how much I appreciate the leadership that Brian 
is giving to the Secret Service. The only apprehension I had about his 
becoming the Director was that he wanted to extend the protection of the 
PPD to country music singers and motorcycle gangs--[laughter]--and I had 
to draw the line somewhere.
    Actually, I came here most of all to say thanks. I compliment the 
architects, the contractors, and all those involved in the construction 
of this magnificent building. And I do believe it will reinforce all the 
values and sense of community that Brian talked about.
    Harry Truman once said, the Secret Service was the only boss he had 
as President, with the exception of Mrs. Truman. And even when I don't 
like it, I have to admit that's true. And I came here to say thank you 
on behalf of Hillary and Chelsea and myself. I know Hillary wanted to be 
here today. I can't tell you how--I feel about the Secret Service the 
way I sometimes feel about some of my friends in the Congress: I like 
them a lot more than they like me.
    They've had to put up with me on so many different occasions, under 
such stress. You know, you wake up in the morning, and you're worried 
about something else, and you take it out by being a little short. 
You're impatient because you're tired and you've got a headache. They 
have to put up with all of it and act like you're still President, even 
when you're not acting like it; you're really being a person.
    I think of all the sacrifices that the Secret Service and the PPD 
has made. I think about all these long, exhausting trips we take. I've 
seen the worried look in the agents' eyes whenever I get out and make 
some spontaneous stop into an unmagged crowd. A lot of times at night, 
I'm working late, and I come down, and I walk in between--sometimes 
after midnight--between the office and the house, and the agents are 
always there. And I often wonder how many children they have and how 
hard it must be for them to be awake while their children are sleeping 
and sleeping while their children are awake.
    Sometimes, I just worry that they're going to have a heart attack on 
the job. I never will forget the first time--all the Secret Service who 
have been in PPD know this--there's this sort of, this elaborate little 
electronic guard system out around the White House. And if anything 
triggers the alarm, if you'll forgive me, all hell breaks loose for the 
Secret Service. You know, they're convinced that, you know, 45 
terrorists are storming the gates; they have to do it. That's why we're 
all so taken care of.
    Anything, any little old thing, can trigger that deal. And I 
remember the first time that happened. I didn't know it. I was up on the 
third floor of the White House, and the Residence is on the second 
floor, and I didn't know what happens. So what happens is, the elevator 
stops, and the SWAT team occupies the staircase with their semiautomatic 
weapons.
    So they're all looking for somebody that's invading the White House. 
I come tromping down the staircase to the third floor; this guy comes 
rushing up on the second floor. I look

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up, and there he is with his weapon pointed at me, and I thought: This 
would be a heck of a note for the Secret Service. [Laughter] ``Clinton 
killed by agent protecting the President.'' [Laughter] That poor--I 
think he still has nightmares about that. [Laughter]
    We're all laughing about it, but this is a hard job. And it's an 
important job. And it's important, the protections that are provided to 
other people and all the other things the Secret Service does, and I 
want to say more about that in a moment. But especially, I want everyone 
to know--I want Larry and Donny and all the people on PPD and all their 
predecessors to know how profoundly grateful I am for the way my wife 
and my daughter and I have been treated and genuinely cared for and 
protected, whether we like it or not. It has made an enormous degree of 
difference in the confidence with which I think the American people can 
express toward their Government, and we are all in your debt.
    I also want to thank you for naming this building after the 32 brave 
men and women who gave their lives in guarding our democracy and in 
whose memory the building now stands. Ten of those 32, I'm sad to say, 
lost their lives during my Presidency, including the 6 in the Oklahoma 
City bombing, one of the most difficult events in my life.
    You have honored their memory in two ways: First, by naming this 
building in their honor; and second, by using this building to continue 
your mission and their mission. Most people know the Secret Service as 
these sort of mysterious, stone-faced figures that are either steely 
eyed or masked behind sexy sunglasses, protecting Presidents and 
visiting world leaders. They don't know much about the ongoing efforts 
of the Secret Service to protect the integrity of our financial system, 
but that's a proud history that stretches back 130 years now.
    When our country was awash in counterfeit currency after the Civil 
War, America turned to the Secret Service. When three Presidents were 
assassinated in four decades, America turned to the Secret Service, 
broadening the mandate at the beginning of this century to include 
protective duties.
    Now, with the new challenges we face in a new and rapidly changing 
world, America still turns to the Secret Service. You are out there 
every day, fighting telecommunications fraud, credit card fraud, 
computer crimes, counterfeiting, abuses of Government programs, taking 
on your investigative and protective assignments across the country and 
all around the world.
    Regardless of the times or the tasks, there has always been a thread 
of honor and integrity, trust, and true confident performance, also, a 
remarkable ability to adapt to change and challenge. Those values are 
symbolized in this building. It is a solid, solid building, standing on 
a firm foundation but looking toward the future.
    So, today, I'm honored to join you in dedicating this building and 
honoring the memory of those who gave their lives for what you do every 
day and in saying a special, special word of profound appreciation for 
the many sacrifices so many have made for me and my family and our 
country.
    Thank you very much.

Note: The President spoke at 4:47 p.m. in the Conference Center. In his 
remarks, he referred to Rev. Monsignor Peter J. Vaghi, pastor, St. 
Patrick's Church, who gave the invocation; and Debra L. Worley, 
headquarters consolidation project manager, and Larry Cockell, Special 
Agent-in-Charge, Presidential Protective Division, U.S. Secret Service.