We had no choice anymore but to go for a special counsel.
And man, she has junk down my throat.
It was fierce and chilling.
She kind of belittled him in front of everybody and anybody that stood up and tried to say this is a bad idea who seemed to smash down and belittled very personally.
Did you ever throw a lamp at your husband?
No, I didn't.
Did you ever throw a Bible at your husband?
No, I didn't.
Do you have a terrible temper?
No, but I do get angry about things.
I'm not going to deny that.
If you go to the end of the end of the line, why don't you go to the end of the line?
The fact is, we had four dead Americans.
Was it because of a protest or was it because of guys out for a walk one night who decided they'd go kill some Americans?
What difference at this point does it make?
You want me to tell you what my husband thinks?
My husband is not the Secretary of State.
I am.
So you ask my opinion, I will tell you my opinion.
I'm not going to be channeling my husband.
This woman, this little soft-spoken, pardon me for the phrase, dowdy woman, that was seen very unassertive, took a hold of my hand and squeezed it and said, do you understand everything that you do?
I could have passed out at that moment.
And she held on to my hand and she said, do you understand everything that you do?
I mean, cold chills went up my spine.
It's the first time I became afraid of that woman.
I am sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and you disagree with this administration, somehow you're not patriotic and we should stand up and say, we are Americans and we have a right to debate and disagree with any administration.
I did not have sexual relations with that woman.
I never told anybody to lie, not a single time.
Don't you someday want to see a woman president of the United States?
It depends upon what the meaning of the word is.
Yes.
I'm just chilling in Cedar Rapids.
All right, there you have it.
You heard the voices of George Stephanopoulos, Dee Dee Myers, Juanita Broderick, and then, of course, the vicious temper of the person that would like to be your next president, Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Now, this is the book that everybody's been talking about, his first interview.
It's called A Crisis of Character.
A White House Secret Service officer discloses his first-hand experience with Hillary Bill and how they operate.
Let me go to the introduction.
I dreamed of becoming an elite White House Secret Service officer, a member of its uniformed division.
Nothing more and certainly nothing less.
My dream came true.
I stood guard, a pistol at my hip, outside the Oval Office, the last barrier before anyone saw Bill Clinton.
The last barrier before Monica Lewinsky saw Bill Clinton.
Yes, I am that Secret Service officer.
I saw Monica, and I saw a lot more.
I saw Hillary, too.
I witnessed her obscenity-laced, her shifting of blame, how she berated Vince Foster until he could stand no more, and how minor incidents involving blue gloves and botched invitations sent her into a tizzy and much more.
We welcome to the program former Presidential Secret Service Officer Gary Byrne is with us.
How are you?
I'm fine.
Thank you so much for having me.
You ready for the media onslaught, left-wing media onslaught that has certainly come in your way?
I spent the whole weekend reading the book.
I have no doubt when you go on your media tour, it's going to be vicious.
You're going to be put on trial.
You ready?
Yes, I think so.
I've experienced a little bit before when this first happened, when the story broke.
So I have a little bit of experience with it, but I'm ready.
I've got my ducks in a row, as we say.
Yeah, well, you know, you're telling your story.
Yes.
And why don't we go to the heart before we even get started into the facts of the story?
Why do you think this is important?
You do explain it, especially, and I'll jump to the end of the book a little bit here, because this is so important to you.
You actually go into great detail that, you know, you had to answer the same question now that you answered in 1998.
You were asked to go before Ken Starr.
Yes.
And what am I going to do about it?
And you knew the answer and that you have to speak up.
Why?
Yes.
Well, at that time, when I was being investigated by Judge Starr, my fear was that if I didn't tell the truth 100% once I had to testify, that they would jail me.
And they told me they did.
I mean, a few of them.
You were facing seven years in jail if you didn't tell the truth.
At least, yeah.
And a couple times, FBI agents involved in the investigation actually threatened to arrest me.
I came to this conclusion, Sean, that telling the truth is important.
Protect the Constitution and the oath that I took to the President of the United States and the Constitution, and that one man does not supersede that.
All this happened because one man couldn't step up.
The man that was the President of the United States at the time couldn't step up and be a man and say what he did, and it all would have been over.
You signed no confidentiality agreement.
So you have every right to write this book.
That's correct.
And the reason I'm coming out now is because I want everybody to know the truth.
I want them to know how these people function.
And I want them to know about the wake of destruction of people that they leave behind them.
This is the truth.
You know, I doubt.
I don't know if I'm going to convince anybody how they're going to vote.
The most important thing about voting is as soon as you become 18, register and vote.
Vote your conscience and get educated on it.
And I hope my book, my true life story here, helps people, young people especially, understand really how they work.
At the end of the book, you said, what I learned about the Clintons firsthand, the hard way, is very important.
It's 2016, but with Hillary Clinton running for president again, it feels uncomfortable like the 1990s again, as if America were trapped in some great cruel time machine, literally hurling us back to the land of Monica and Mogadishu and a thousand other Clinton-era nightmares.
Fool me once, as the saying goes, your fault.
Fool me twice.
The bottom line, you go on to say, my job in the 90s was to lay down my life for the president.
My obligation today is to raise my voice to help safeguard the presidency from Bill and Hillary Clinton and to remind readers like you what happened back then.
We all remember or should remember what a Clinton White House was like.
If we board that time machine for a return trip, it's our fault.
Yes, and that's true.
As we go on in the interview, I'm going to be able to expand a little bit more, but there's just so many examples of, For instance, routinely in the very beginning in the early 90s, Mrs. Clinton uses the term the right-wing conspiracy.
There's no such thing.
It's not the right-wing conspiracy.
It's continuous bad behavior and bad decisions.
And even when they do try to do some kind of policy, something maybe good for the country, it completely falls apart because there's so many scandals going on they can't focus on running the country.
I mean, I've used this analogy before, Sean.
If you took every scandal that President Bill Clinton was involved in and put it on single spaces, you couldn't fit it on two pieces of paper.
It's incredible.
You describe her leadership style as volcanic, impulsive, enabled by sycophants, disdainful of the rules set for everyone else who hasn't changed a bit.
That is 100% true.
I never understood.
It didn't take long to figure out how they worked and how they acted.
And, you know, at the time, I was a member of the Secret Service Uniform Division, and I just, you know, watched what went on and I observed the way people acted around her.
And her coworkers, these people that we referred to back then as the Arkansas Mafia, friends from Arkansas, they were afraid of her.
They were terrified.
And at first, I'm like, I don't understand that.
And by this time, I had been close to her proximity-wise when I saw her lash out at somebody.
And to me, it was almost comical.
I was like, God, I've never seen anybody so upset over something so simple.
And her anger and rage isn't fixing anything.
It never does.
I don't think anger or rage works for anybody.
No.
You said, though, portrayed as the long-suffering spouse of an unfaithful husband whose infidelities I personally observed and knew to be true, the Hillary Clinton I saw was anything but a sympathetic victim.
Now, those loyal to her kept coming back for these volcanic eruptions of hers.
I witnessed firsthand the Clintons' personal and professional dysfunction.
So consumed were they by scandal, so intent on destroying their real or imagined enemies, governing was an afterthought.
Why don't you go into describing this temper that you're describing?
So there's many examples of that.
The one that always comes to mind is I refer to it as the blue glove incident.
And so what happened is that a group of people were coming in to visit with the president and his senior staff.
And you said he was very charming to people.
He would always want to give them extra time.
He was always accommodating to anybody that came by.
Yes, 100%.
He was incredibly charming.
I actually had the opportunity to introduce some family members to him one time.
And my father, for five minutes, couldn't open his mouth.
I mean, it was just incredible.
And so anyway, Mrs. Clinton's anger at this time, these visitors were coming in.
And through a series of errors with the uniform division, as these guests were coming in, there was about 30 to 40, I think, guests.
And they were representative members of the gay and lesbian coalition that helped get President Clinton elected the first time.
And so under the promise that he would immediately allow gays in the military.
And things were different back then, as you well remember, I'm sure.
And then it became a compromise of don't ask, don't tell.
Right.
And they were furious about that.
So the person bringing them in was former Congressman Barney Frank.
So I'm actually posted at the Oval Office, and I get a phone call from a friend of mine, and he described to me, he said, heads up, we just had an incident.
And what he described to me was as the guests were coming in, the officers that were running the metal detectors, they were putting on these blue gloves that we're required to wear.
When Barney Frank saw them putting the gloves on, he said, why are you putting those gloves on, officer?
And the one guy, I refer to him in the book as Krusty.
He's this great old Marine from the Vietnam era.
He put the gloves on.
He looked the congressman right in the eye and goes, why do you think?
Well, what Barney Frank didn't know was the list that we had of who was coming in, it actually said on the top, HIV positive representatives.
Now, we all knew that you can't get HIV that way, but we still have to wear the gloves because we're protecting ourselves from other stuff.
Right.
And that was standard operating procedure.
It was, absolutely.
So when they got in, they took advantage of what happened there, and they berated the staff, and it got up to Mrs. Clinton, and she went off the deep end.
And I describe it in the book as on a scale of one to 10, this was about a one, considering what goes on around the world and what the presidency is responsible for.
So I get a heads-up phone call from an officer on the east side of the White House.
He said, heads up, here comes Mrs. Clinton, and she's bad.
So she came over, she went into the Oval Office, and she berated the president for about 40 minutes.
It's so loud that the agent and I that were posted outside the Oval Office actually closed a doorway that blocked off the Roosevelt room and some outer hallways because she was so loud.
And she berated the president.
She blamed everything on us.
She called us a bunch of.
Yeah.
Don't worry.
You can't say it on radio.
I know what you're going to say.
She caught us a bunch of rear ends and used a lot of foul language.
And it got so bad that at one point the agent looked at me and realized, he said, the president is actually defending you guys.
And it was kind of a comical moment.
I'm like, oh, my God, the president's defending us.
She wanted to get rid of you because she said, oh, they're loyal to George Herbert Walker Bush.
They were here with him.
They're disloyal to us.
They have been from day one.
Sure.
They did have a weird paranoia about the Bush administration.
They actually replaced the phone system because they thought they had it tapped, almost a brand new phone system.
Wow.
When they first got there.
And it was expensive, and they didn't have a way to pay for it at first.
Yeah.
Well, you talk at length of how they became, you know, spending a lot of money was a big issue.
And you had to draw straws to give her the bad news.
Tell us about, you start chapter one, the vase.
Yes.
So I come into work one morning.
I'm assigned to the Oval Office.
That's my permanent post at the time.
And I come in early, I get my workout in.
And as I'm heading over, I run into a couple of the people that work in the mansion.
And they said, oh, wait, you get in there and hear what happened.
So I'm like, oh, okay.
So I went over to the mansion and talked to my buddy who worked on the mansion floor.
And I said, what's going on?
I just saw George and so-and-so that they said something happened.
They said, oh, that the president of the first lady had this huge fight last night.
And that it was so loud that the people that work in the mansion that take care of the first family, like they backed away downstairs, and it was loud.
And then there was a loud noise, like a crashing sound.
And when it went up to be investigated, there was a broken vase on the floor.
And, you know, nothing at the way.
It was across the hall from where it was normally placed.
Right.
It wasn't like, it didn't fall over.
No, no, no.
It was thrown.
Right.
That appears to be.
And the next morning he had a black eye.
Yeah.
The next time I saw him, he had a black eye.
I wasn't there.
So I don't know if he hit her, if she hit him.
I don't know if she threw the vase at him.
I don't know how he got the black eye.
But I'm going to tell you this, the gardener didn't give it to him.
Nobody in the Secret Service hit him.
And so when he came down that next morning, you could see they were trying to hide a black mark with makeup and stuff.
Right.
It didn't work.
And you even asked, oh, and they said it's allergies.
And the answer was allergies in one eye, not two.
Right.
Right.
And then, yeah, exactly.
We were joined by Gary Byrne.
We have a lot of time.
Another hour with Gary.
He's going to stay with us.
His brand new book, it's making a lot of headlines.
His first interview.
It's called A Crisis of Character.
A White House Secret Service officer discloses his first-hand experience with Hillary Bill and how they operate.
You can get the book at Amazon.com.
We have it on our website, Hannity.com, and also in bookstores everywhere starting tomorrow.
Stay right here for our final news roundup and information overload.
All right, news roundup, information overload hour here on the Sean Hannity show.
We have Senator Mike Lee is going to stop by in studio coming up at the bottom of this half hour.
We continue with Secret Service Officer Gary Byrne.
He's got a brand new book out.
It's made a lot of news.
It's called A Crisis of Character.
White House Secret Service Officer discloses his first-hand experience with Hillary, Bill, and how they operate.
Let me go back to the women part of it.
You knew things were going on.
Then there was the map room incident with Eleanor Mondale.
You know for a fact that there were other women as well that we don't know whose names they are, and you're not disclosing them.
And you even at one point hid evidence for Bill Clinton.
Sure.
Did you know you were breaking the law doing that?
Well, it technically wasn't Evans because I didn't know there wasn't an investigation going on.
I didn't know that.
But yes, there was an incident, a couple incidences, where the Navy steward brought to my attention that he had found some hand towels, white hand towels that were in one case stained with lipstick and another case stained with men's fluids, what appeared to be.
Oh, good grief.
This is the president.
This is the Oval Office.
Reagan wouldn't take his jacket off in that office for crying out loud.
Right.
He wouldn't walk across the seal.
So when I mentioned earlier that I've gone through some kind of threshold, there's a good example of what pushed me through it a little bit.
It's just bizarre.
So the steward was describing.
So you knew who it was.
Listen, any adult male knows what we were looking at.
And my fear was that, you know, the only people that handled that stuff were the Navy stewards downstairs that washed.
They're all laughing in there.
Stop.
This crew's got to, that's my crew.
They're very bad people.
They want the salacious details.
Yeah.
They washed the towels.
They would know.
These guys are Navy men.
They know what they would be looking at.
And at this point, I was trying to protect from any more rumors.
So I told Nelvis, I found the plastic bag out of the trash can liner.
I told Nelvis to throw them in the bag, and I destroyed them.
And then, of course, sometime later, when the story broke, broke by Matt Drudge, and then I heard about it on the Howard Stern show.
And I knew right then, I mean, my stomach almost flipped out of my body.
I was so terrified because I connected the dots instantly.
You know, that story's true.
It's out.
They're going to come after us.
You know, it's just got to be surreal.
You know, here, you wanted to do this job your whole life.
I did.
And the next thing you know, you're throwing out soiled towels of the president with his mistress.
Yeah.
And mistress is.
Yeah.
And in the case of the intern, by this time, or at some point, she becomes a government employee.
So now she's a government paid mistress.
It was bizarre when you think about it in hindsight.
It's just crazy.
You know, well, I mean, it's certainly reckless for a whole variety of reasons here.
Correct.
Let me ask you this question.
You said during the shutdown, when Monica was visiting and she gained access that she wanted so badly, were you there at that point?
You were outside the door.
I was.
So when all this went on, and she was there a lot more than we knew.
Yeah, sure.
What you're describing is, and the shutdown was actually kind of a windfall for Monica because the way it works is the only essential people could come in now.
So the only essential people that were allowed to come in and help President Clinton was one assistant, which would have been Betty Curry.
Right.
And then Leon Panetta, and he could have a couple interns.
And she ended up being one of the interns.
And in hindsight, it was like, it's almost comical.
I mean, you can't write this.
And so that's when she gets, so during this time, these interns, they were across from the Oval Office in the Roosevelt Room.
And that's where they were kind of working out of.
And when they needed something done, you know, they would go and find them there and then ask them to do it.
And if Hillary came by during any of this, you were supposed to refuse Hillary entry?
No, you can't refuse the first lady entry, but we certainly were paying attention to her movements.
When you're a protectee of the Secret Services.
And they would talk to you saying, watch out.
She's on the warpath.
And you would know before she came down.
Right.
They would use her call sign.
They'd say, you know, Evergreen moving, Evergreen moving.
We already know she's in the mansion, so she's leaving the private living quarters.
Right.
And then you would, you know, once she hit the ground floor, if they said Hillary West Wing, you know she was headed that way.
Wasn't the president at all embarrassed when he got caught with any of these women or Eleanor Mondale?
For example, didn't you see them making out on the Oval Office desk?
No, I saw Eleanor Mondale and the president making out in the map room.
I mean, it was like full-on.
Yes, they were like two high school seniors lip-locked, you know, hugging each other.
And what happened was one of the housemen, excuse me, Navy stewards went to go into the room to deliver a clean shirt to the president.
He had a shirt in his hand.
And as he started towards the door, you know, he said hi to us.
I just happened to be standing there on my way back to my post.
And he opened the door, but he was looking at us, and there they were.
But everybody knew.
How did he not think this was going to come out?
Everybody knew.
You don't think he cared.
I don't think he cared that people knew because he was used to being covered.
He was used to being protected.
He was used to getting away with it.
So it was expected that your job is you're going to be quiet about this.
I think, in hindsight, I think that everything that I heard from Arkansas, from the troopers and sheriffs down there, was true.
And one officer actually told you that everything you hear about them is true and worse.
Yes, and when he did, I'm telling you, it was like he was talking, looking right through me.
Like it was a significant, I mean, I only knew this guy for a couple of minutes.
And when he told me that, I felt like it was somebody telling me something, you know, Gary, here's some good investment advice for your life.
You know what I mean?
He was serious, and he meant it.
Yeah.
And so, yeah, it was a very bizarre time, Sean.
You talk in the book, for example.
We had become work friends.
He knew that by serving the president, even a single cup of tea to ease his mind, he served his nation, whatever the president needed, whenever he needed it.
And you're talking about the White House, what's the position?
So the Stewart.
Stewart.
Yeah, I'm probably describing Nelvis there, but there were quite a few stewards.
Yeah, there were quite a few stewards.
They have a great history.
Traditionally, they were actually all Filipino men.
And they have a great story behind that.
Yeah, I mean, you're describing a surreal.
Tell us about the end of your relationship with him.
He's getting ready to, you know, when you were leaving.
So leaving Nelvis?
No, no, no.
Leaving, you know, for example, you spent, you left your job, right?
Right, so with the president.
So sometime before the story broke, I had basically had enough of what was going on.
And I didn't know what was coming, but I was tired of seeing some of the stuff that was going on.
And it was time for me to move on.
So I was trying to get into a position in the Secret Service Uniform Division tour section.
And they do all the tours for the public and for the first family and events.
If you've ever been to the White House for an event, the Uniform Division people screen you in and out.
And so anyway, I wanted to go to Tours because I had had enough of what was going on at the Oval Office.
And then eventually I left Tours and went out to the training center to get away from it.
And then, of course, when the story broke, all those relationships with those people were under a huge strain because everybody was terrified about testifying.
And so you didn't want to do it.
No, I did not.
I wanted nothing to do with it because I knew that I was going to have to talk about stuff that, I mean, it sounds silly saying it now because I'm coming out with all this, but it was really nobody's business.
And I mean that as far as it could all have been stopped by the president coming forward and manning up and doing the right thing and saying, yes, this did happen.
Here's the steps we're going to take so it never happens again, and I'm sorry, and get on with running the government instead of that in huge debacle with Congress.
It was incredible.
Yeah.
You were even threatened at one point that somebody would arrest you in front of your pregnant wife.
Yes, the FBI agent that was involved in one particular day when I was being deposed at Judge Starr's office, temporary office, and they were trying to get me riled up, and they did.
And, you know, it was a little embarrassing that I let them get me riled up.
But, you know, you can only, when you threaten to, you know, talk about somebody's spouse with your first kid, it's a little naughty.
It was over the top, and he got what he wanted, a reaction, and I gave him one.
When we hear the stories and we go over, for example, the secret server email thing of Hillary, when we hear that, and you discuss a little bit in the book about Benghazi and some of the other current events, but that fits the character.
Absolutely.
It falls right into place.
It's the same mentality or actions that I saw the whole time I was there.
I, Hillary Clinton, am not actually, I don't have to follow procedure.
You do what I want when I do it.
Do as I say, not as I do.
You say all of this was such a distraction to such a big level that governing was last on their list.
Yeah, that's exactly the way it appeared.
And this is somebody who watched close by.
You know, when all your staff, when George Stephanopoulos and Ram Emmanuel and these guys are doing nothing but putting out scandals and trying to fix stuff and twist it, Chris, they must have been exhausted when you think of all the scandals.
You even talked about Leon Panetta and Dick Morris huddling.
I'm sorry, Leon Panetta was the target of Hillary and Dick Morris discussing how to get rid of him as the chief of staff.
Well, I'm not sure if they were actually trying to get rid of him, but what they were doing is they were meeting with Dick Morris at night.
Now, we would see Dick Morris come in usually around 10 o'clock at night.
We'd get a phone call from the Southwest Gate, you know, and the guy would say, hey, Gary Morris is here.
And he'd come up, and he always looked like he was lost in the West Wing.
He'd come through the West Side, and then if the president wasn't in the Oval Office, we would give him directions to walk to the next office or get him over to the mansion.
And then, now, of course, we used to.
Was he closer to Hillary or to Bill?
Well, he was closer to Hillary.
She apparently was his friend.
And he was, you know, back then a Republican operative.
Right.
And he was teaching them what he kind of claims he invented was triangulation.
Excuse me.
Triangulation.
Triangulation.
And so now, of course, we don't know what's going on, but when I read Leon Panetta's book and he talked about this, it fell right into place.
We used to see Dick Morris coming in all the time.
I mean, we never said anything to anybody.
That's not our job.
It had to be a cool job, though, for you.
I was thinking about this as I was reading about your life and background.
I mean, every day you're seeing big names coming in.
It's incredible.
It's incredible.
I never wanted to leave.
And, of course, that changed when this bizarre stuff happened.
I would, you know, in hindsight, if that hadn't happened, they would have had to take me out of there in a wheelchair with a crowbar.
What did you think about Clinton when you knew he was lying to the nation?
I was embarrassed.
I was disgraced.
And I was afraid because I was afraid, I mean, as far as the relationship with the intern went, I was afraid.
I knew it would come back to us.
You knew it would.
You knew it would come out.
There was just too many people that knew it.
You know, one of the things that saved us, and I talk about this in the book, was that Linda Tripp did the right thing.
Linda Tripp did the right thing.
By the way, Linda Tripp and Monica wouldn't have met but for you pushing and forcing the issue of getting Monica out of there.
Right.
Which didn't last too long, but long enough for her to meet Linda.
Yeah, I believe that's correct when she went over there.
But yeah, so Linda Tripp, excuse me, yeah, Linda Tripp by encouraging Monica to keep the dress and then getting hold of it, that was evidence.
And if that wasn't there, it would have just been our word against his.
And the ideal that you can go in there, I mean, maybe the president and Mrs. Clinton and high-up government people can get away with answering under oath of, I don't remember, I don't recall, but somebody in the Secret Service is not going to get away with that.
One of the things, I've been to the Oval Office maybe four times.
You would have been gone by then.
Yeah.
But I remember the first time I walked in there, it was like a surreal experience.
You don't really feel like it seems like everything is in slow motion.
It never goes away, that feeling.
Because I almost felt like, wait a minute, this isn't really the president.
Yeah.
This must be a double.
Yeah, no.
Did anyone ever tell you that before?
Yes, yes.
And I've experienced it myself where it's almost like one evening I actually had the opportunity to introduce my parents and some family friends to President Clinton.
Right.
And we were taking a tour and he was coming back from the east side.
He was doing some public service announcements.
And the agents said, hey, we're bringing him over.
Just have your family stand here.
And he came up and talked to them and they were just floored.
And it was great.
And it was a great experience.
And it's one of those things when I talk about having a hard time coming out and whatever pushed me forward to do this.
That was one of those experiences where I felt, you know, I certainly feel like the word betrayed comes in there, but clearly I think it's more important for the American people to know the truth about these people.
And you're ready for what's coming your way after this interview.
I am.
And you don't care.
You already thought that through.
I care, but when you do the kind of work that I've done and people that do what I do, you look at your goal and you look what's important and then you take the actions you have to do.
You think the country needs to know this before they go and vote in November.
I do.
I absolutely do.
So the person that we know in Hillary Clinton is a phony.
It is a mirage.
It's not real.
No, it is.
It's a carefully manufactured political robot, basically.
It's not even carefully manufactured.
If you really pay attention and you're not completely a Democrat or a Clinton follower, you see these things I'm talking about.
You know it's true.
You see the ages.
You've heard these stories.
And if somebody that does what I did and has taken the risk, you know, I'm not taking this risk for any other reason but the truth.
You know, by the time this is all over with, who knows what's going to be left to me, so to speak.
So, but I think it's important.
People need to know this.
And, you know, if what I've done is really not right, well, then I'll deal with that someday when I'm judged in heaven.
Well, the book is phenomenal.
I couldn't put it down, honestly.
I opened it up this weekend and I'm like half asleep, but I'm still reading it.
You know, when you're fighting sleep with reading a book you really like.
We wrote some of it like that.
Yeah.
Crisis of Character is the name of the book.
A White House Secret Service officer discloses his firsthand experience with Hillary, Bill, and how they operate.
He'll join us on Hannity tonight at 10.
The book is available on Amazon.com, Hannity.com.
And as of today or tomorrow, tomorrow the latest, in bookstores all around the country.
Gary, number one, thank you for your service.
Thank you.
You are one of the guys that makes the country great.
Thank you.
And you served your country with real honor and distinction.
And I think what you're doing here is a public service, although the Hillary people, I'm sure, won't view it that way.