• Last week, the two sent a similar letter to the Secret Service last week.

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  • The Cleveland Browns football team sent a five-page submission, written by a former director of the U.S. Secret Service, that began with a history of security concerns related to the late Al Lerner, a businessman who bought the revived Cleveland franchise in 1998 and who, according to the letter, held "Top Secret" security clearance during the George W. Bush administration.

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  • Fortunately, his wife never did have to read his farewell letter, and Brugioni kept its contents a secret.

    BBC: Cuba missile crisis: When nuclear war seemed inevitable

  • In his letter, Grassley noted that he had asked Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan whether any White House advance staffers had been involved but hadn't received an answer by Monday.

    CNN: STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • He remained on the board (in the chair for five years), and signs of loyalty to principles appeared in 1999 when he wrote an open letter to the paper's employees condemning a secret deal in which the management had agreed to devote an edition of the Sunday magazine to a local sports arena in return for sharing the advertising profits.

    ECONOMIST: Otis Chandler

  • In his letter, Grassley noted that he had asked Sullivan, the Secret Service director, whether any White House advance staffers had been involved, but he hadn't received an answer by Monday.

    CNN: Senators criticize military briefing on Colombia scandal

  • W. Bush wrote the group an outraged letter defending those who work for the government, including one Secret Service agent killed in Oklahoma City who had worked on Bush's detail in the White House.

    CNN: GOP and NRA: a love fest

  • "The incident in Cartagena is troubling because Secret Service agents and officers made a range of bad decisions, " said a letter from Issa, R-California, and Cummings of Maryland.

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  • There was a secret deciphering office in London, a successor to the Post Office's foreign letter office, and another code-breaking unit in the Admiralty, both of which cracked Napoleon's codes, as did the bureau noir attached to every European government (though the Austrians reckoned their best intelligence came from the emperor's pillow talk).

    ECONOMIST: Napoleon and Wellington

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