Overview
- The Washington Post, cited by international outlets, reports roughly 400–500 Army CID agents are now assigned to protect Pete Hegseth and his family, far above prior norms.
- Agents have been pulled from criminal probes for weeks-long posts at residences in Minnesota, Tennessee and Washington, D.C., with periods guarding homes of ex-wives also reported.
- Internal documents described by the Post show a Defense Department request for up to 250 additional protection hires and as much as $253 million in added funding.
- CID officials say investigative capacity is being strained by the reassignment, and some military reservists have been activated to help cover personnel gaps.
- Pentagon officials defend the footprint as threat-driven and CID-recommended, with reporting describing the effort as unprecedented in scale and costing several million dollars.