It’s difficult to say which member of Donald Trump’s team was the most controversial, but Scott Pruitt, who led the Environmental Protection Agency, is certainly in the running for the top slot. After all, the Oklahoma Republican abused his office to such a ridiculous extent that he found himself at the center of at least 14 investigations.
Some of those examinations are just now wrapping up. The New York Times reported late last week:
Scott Pruitt, while in charge of the Environmental Protection Agency during the Trump administration, repeatedly pressured his federal security officers to drive at excessive and sometimes dangerous speeds on routine trips, with sirens and emergency lights on, because he had a habit of running late, according to a federal report released on Thursday.
“Can you guys use that magic button to get us through traffic?” Pruitt would ask members of his security detail, the report said.
At first blush, this might not sound that bad. After all, we’ve probably all exceeded speed limits on occasion. But in this instance, the details matter: The Times’ report added, “Among the incidents cited in the report was a 2017 trip in which a special agent drove Mr. Pruitt with the lights and sirens going, in the wrong direction into oncoming traffic, to pick up Mr. Pruitt’s dry cleaning, when Mr. Pruitt was late for an agency meeting.”
If I were writing a biography of the Oklahoma Republican, I’d be tempted to call it, “In The Wrong Direction Into Oncoming Traffic: The Scott Pruitt Story.”
But as it turns out, that wasn’t the only revelation of interest. E&E News reported yesterday that the EPA has abandoned its Trump-era defense of a soundproof booth built for Pruitt.
EPA has acknowledged that the installation of the secure phone booth in the administrator’s office ran afoul of appropriations law, which a congressional watchdog office determined was the case more than four years ago. Letters recently obtained by E&E News show that the agency has reported the infraction — and that more violations were found tied to decorating Pruitt’s office.
This mysterious booth has long been a symbol of Pruitt’s ridiculous tenure in the executive branch. Indeed, longtime readers may recall that it was just months into his EPA tenure when the Republican became the beneficiary of a customized, soundproof “privacy booth” to review and discuss sensitive materials.
The EPA already had a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility (SCIF), but in 2017, the agency signed a contract for another, to be used by its then-administrator.









