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Ss museum
#1
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-secret-museum-20100516,0,614112.story

latimes.com
Secret Service guards its museum closely
The agency's artifacts and its enemies' counterfeiting tools are on display, but you can't just walk in to see them. It's closed to the public.
By Ralph Vartabedian, Los Angeles Times
May 16, 2010
Reporting from Washington
The six-story tan brick building on H Street houses one of the most secret museums in Washington.

It is not listed in visitor guides, and if any camera-toting tourists in shorts and sneakers should show up, they wouldn't get past the front door or the reception desk behind the bullet-proof glass.

This is the headquarters of the Secret Service, the federal law enforcement agency charged with protecting the life of the president and battling financial fraud.

On the first floor, not far from the front lobby, is the agency's small museum. It is, unsurprisingly, closed to the public.

The museum, which is no bigger than a few hundred square feet, is open only to the agency's 6,000 employees and official visitors. An occasional academic is admitted, said Special Agent Malcolm DuBois Wiley Sr., a spokesman for the agency.

Its collection of artifacts, including items from assassination attempts, is unlike anything at the Smithsonian or the National Archives.

The window from the limousine that carried President Reagan on the day he was shot by John Hinckley Jr. is on display, bearing a bullet hole.

"Here's the standard-issue Tommy gun that was used until 1960," noted the museum's archivist, pointing to the submachine gun on the wall.

The archivist strolled through the displays, occasionally noting interesting items. The museum, at the moment, was empty.

The archivist is a middle-aged man who wears trim suits with white shirts and speaks in hushed tones. Under Secret Service policy, his identity is secret.

He watches over a remarkable collection of tools and artifacts used by the Secret Service and its foes. Along one wall, the museum honors the 35 men and women who have died in the line of duty since the agency was founded in 1865. At the building entrance, employees are reminded of the service's motto: "Worthy of trust and confidence."

In addition to guarding the life of the president and his family, as well as other officials and visiting dignitaries, the Secret Service has the responsibility of fighting various types of financial fraud and counterfeiting of U.S. currency.

"This is the printing press used by Count Victor Lustig," the archivist said.

Lustig was a confidence man who worked with engraver William Watts to flood New York with phony $100 bills during the Great Depression.

The "king of counterfeiters" William Brockway and other masters of the craft also have displays in the museum.

Phony $100 bills from different eras line the museum walls. They are posted next to legitimate bills, along with magnifying glasses for a closer comparison.

Missing from the phony money are the fine engraving lines and embossing that are on legitimate bills. Sometimes the color scheme is wrong or the Benjamin Franklin doesn't look quite as sharp as he does on legitimate bills.

On an upper floor, there are several wall displays with millions of dollars worth of currency that no longer circulates, including the $500, $1,000 and $10,000 notes. There is also a rare $100,000 gold certificate, which was used in transactions between the Treasury and the Federal Reserve during the Depression.

The displays are located behind locked doors in an area that houses the agency's forensic scientists and currency experts, who trace the origins of counterfeit bills. They may be some of the world's best counterfeiters as well.

"We counterfeit new currency before it comes out," an official said. "We want to assess how difficult it is to counterfeit with common printing and art supplies."

Like nearly everyone in the building, the official's identity could not be divulged.

ralph.vartabedian@latimes.com
Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

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#2
I thought this was about the Schutzstaffel as in Waffen SS when I looked at the title and I wasn't that wrong was I?
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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#3
NO MAM YOU WERE NOT THAT WRONG NOT At all.....http://subdy.com/can-a-secret-service-ag...tizen.html
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