At our March Noon Time talk, New Town residents got the inside scoop about life as a Secret Service agent from Tony Zotto. His friendly, modest and easy-going manner hardly suggests that he spent a career involving tremendous responsibility for the safety of our country’s leaders and constant vigilance.
After early stints with the FBI and State Department’s diplomatic security program, Tony Zotto was a member of the United States Secret Service for 21 years, serving in a variety of capacities. He served on and led the personal protective teams guarding presidents and vice-presidents, including Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Al Gore, and Dick Cheney, and presidential candidates, including Bob Dole. Indeed, he spent almost five years guarding Reagan.
Rather than giving a formal talk, Tony shared a series of reminiscences and stories as well as fielding questions from New Towners. For instance, he provided fascinating details about his job. He noted that in public situations agents always kept a hand on the principal, that is the person they are guarding, in order to immediately be able to pull them to safety.
Tony recalled that the political campaigns were particularly “brutal” for the Secret Service agents. He spent so much time in Iowa, site of one of the important early primaries, that he knew every city in the state, and he shuddered recalling standing in the cold during rallies in the midst of New Hampshire winters.
Tony also worked with the Secret Service advance teams that made security preparations whenever the president or vice-president traveled. For him, this was one of the most important parts of the job. Every movement of the president requires intricate planning, involving at least a week’s work on site before trips within the U.S. Overseas trips required a month’s preparation, in coordination with local police and security units. In 1988, Tony worked closely with the KGB in planning Reagan’s meeting with Gorbachev.
It was failures in advance work that resulted in successful attacks. He noted that before President Reagan was shot in March 1981, the press was allowed to get close to the president and there was little effort to separate the press from the public. By mingling with reporters, would-be assassin John Hinkley Jr. was able to shoot Reagan.
Tony was with Vice President Dick Cheney on September 11, and he will speak again at a Noon Time talk in early September as part of a panel exploring that event.
Our next New Town talk is Thursday, April 16. Liz Fones-Wolf, Professor of History, emeritus, West Virginia University, will discuss the history of American women in the U.S. military during World War II.