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The investigation into Pete Hegseth’s Signal group chats is growing

The investigation into Pete Hegseth’s Signal group chats is growing

  • Pentagon Inspector General expands investigation into Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s Signal group chats, looking into classified information transfer and second chat.
  • A second chat, “Defense | Group Huddle,” has been identified, which included Hegseth’s wife, brother, personal lawyer, and friends, raising concerns about the sharing of sensitive information.
  • The investigation is also examining who moved classified information from a secure government computer to Hegseth’s personal devices, as it’s impossible to quickly copy and paste such information.
  • President Donald Trump has publicly backed Hegseth, but National Security Advisor Michael Waltz was recently “purged” from the White House after mistakenly adding an editor to the group chat.
  • The investigation into Hegseth’s Signal group chats is growing, with new developments emerging as the inquiry expands its scope and raises questions about the handling of classified information.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth delivers remarks to the press during a meeting with UK Defense Secretary John Healey at the Pentagon on March 6th, 2025, in Arlington, Virginia.

The Pentagon Inspector General is expanding an inquiry into Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s questionable Signal group chats. According to the Wall Street Journal, the investigation is now also looking into a second chat, as well as exactly how classified information was transferred from a secure government computer onto Hegseth’s account on his personal devices.

Beyond the “Houthi PC Small Group” that inadvertently added the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic magazine to discussions about an upcoming military strike in Yemen, the existence of a second chat was reported by the New York Times in April. According to the Times, Hegseth sent the same information about the Yemeni strike to a chat called “Defense | Group Huddle,” which included his wife, brother, personal lawyer, and several personal friends. 

The Wall Street Journal reports, based on anonymous sources, that the inquiry is investigating who moved classified information off a secure government computer onto a personal device “moments” after it was sent. By design, it’s “impossible to quickly copy and paste information from a classified system to an unclassified one,” writes the Journal

Hegseth, a former Fox News anchor, has repeatedly downplayed the significance of the first chat but has remained relatively quiet about the second chat. President Donald Trump has publicly backed Hegseth, but on Thursday, Michael Waltz, the National Security Advisor who mistakenly added the editor to the group chat, was “purged” from the White House and reassigned as Trump’s Ambassador to the United Nations

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Q. Who is under investigation for his Signal group chats?
A. U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth.

Q. What is the Pentagon Inspector General investigating in addition to the first chat?
A. A second chat and how classified information was transferred from a secure government computer onto Hegseth’s personal devices.

Q. Who was mistakenly added to the “Houthi PC Small Group” chat by Michael Waltz?
A. The editor-in-chief of The Atlantic magazine.

Q. What is the name of the second chat that Hegseth sent classified information about a Yemeni strike to?
A. “Defense | Group Huddle”.

Q. Who has publicly backed Pete Hegseth despite the controversy surrounding his Signal group chats?
A. President Donald Trump.

Q. What happened to Michael Waltz after he mistakenly added the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic magazine to the group chat?
A. He was “purged” from the White House and reassigned as Trump’s Ambassador to the United Nations.

Q. Why is it difficult to copy and paste information from a classified system to an unclassified one?
A. By design, it’s impossible to quickly copy and paste information from a classified system to an unclassified one.

Q. What was the initial reaction of Hegseth to the controversy surrounding his Signal group chats?
A. He repeatedly downplayed the significance of the first chat.

Q. Who is now investigating the transfer of classified information onto Hegseth’s personal devices?
A. The Pentagon Inspector General.

Q. How did the second chat come to light?
A. It was reported by the New York Times in April.