Keith Schiller (born
c. 1959)[1] is an American former law enforcement official and security consultant who served as
Deputy Assistant to U.S. President
Donald Trump and Director of
Oval Office Operations. Prior to his appointment in the
Trump administration, Schiller served as the director of security for
The Trump Organization. In that capacity, he was the personal bodyguard to Trump. He has been described as "one of Trump's most loyal and trusted aides" and "a constant presence at Trump's side for nearly two decades."[2]
Plattekill Police Department and New York State Division for Youth
After leaving the navy in 1984, Schiller returned to New York. In the same year, he found work as a counselor in the
New York State Division for Youth (after volunteering as a counselor through his church) and concurrently served as a police officer at the
Plattekill Police Department, holding those two jobs until 1992.[3]
New York City Police Department
In 1992, Schiller was hired by the
New York City Police Department (NYPD) and worked there for twelve years; he began as a transit officer.[4] He graduated from the
New York City Police Academy, and served as a patrol officer in northern
Manhattan which at the time was the epicenter of the
cocaine trade.[3] After a brief stint as an undercover officer, Schiller joined the Street Narcotics Enforcement Unit with the 34th Precinct, where he was the rammer (charged with breaking the door during raids). He described his job as "busting into drug houses up to three times a night".[3] He also spent time in the high-intensity drug-trafficking area working under then-Lieutenant David E. Chong, who describes Schiller as a "devoted, physical and loyal officer" who "always had his boss's back".[3] During his career at the department he was a narcotics officer with the NYPD Strike Force, and the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area program of New York and New Jersey.[5]
Schiller regularly handled
wiretaps, search warrants, and large-scale seizures of drugs.[3]
Trump Organization and White House
In 1999, Schiller saw
Marla Maples,
Donald Trump's then-wife, at the
Manhattan District Attorney's office accompanied by a bodyguard, whom Schiller judged as not being particularly imposing. Seeking side work to supplement his NYPD salary, Schiller asked the assistant district attorney to put in a good word with Trump, so that he could be employed as a bodyguard. The Trump Organization eventually brought him on for a one-month trial and later that year hired him officially. Schiller remained a part-time bodyguard until he retired from the NYPD in 2002. In 2004, Trump promoted him to be his director of security.
Schiller made headlines in 2015 when he hit a protester outside
Trump Tower.[6][7][8]
He was appointed Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of Oval Office Operations after Trump became president in January 2017. In this role, he accompanied
Jared Kushner to
Iraq and sat in on meetings, and became known as a Trump
fixer.[9][10] Schiller was selected by Trump to personally deliver to
FBI headquarters the
letter telling FBI director James Comey that he was being dismissed "effective immediately";[11][12] Comey was not present at the time, learning of his firing from television reports while in Los Angeles.[13]
A week later, Schiller unintentionally exposed Secretary of Defense
James Mattis' cell phone number when a photograph of Schiller carrying papers with the handwritten number on a
sticky note was published in The Washington Post.[14]
On September 1, 2017, it was reported by CNN that Schiller intended to leave his White House position in late September or early October due to financial considerations.[2] Although White House Press Secretary
Sarah Huckabee Sanders dismissed the story as "not true";[2] the next day,
CBS News correspondent
Major Garrett cited "two White House sources" as confirming that Schiller indeed planned to leave the White House and relocate to Florida for financial and professional reasons.[15] Three people close to Schiller, speaking on background, also confirmed reports of his impending departure to The New York Times White House correspondent
Maggie Haberman.[16] Schiller refused to comment on the accuracy of the report,[2] in keeping with his policy of declining interviews with journalists.[17]
Schiller left his White House position on September 20, 2017, reportedly after
White House Chief of StaffJohn F. Kelly told him he needed permission to speak to the president and to provide written reports of those conversations.[18][19][20] Previously,
Bloomberg had reported that Schiller would return to private security when he left the Trump Administration.[21]
On November 1, 2017, Schiller was named as one of several high-profile witnesses who would be privately interviewed by the
House Intelligence Committee as part of its Russia investigations.[22][23] The interview was on November 7 and reportedly he told the committee that the salacious allegations in the
Donald Trump-Russia dossier were not true. He also was said to say he could not recall or was not aware of
links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies.[24] He testified that a Russian offered to send five women to Trump's hotel room during their 2013 trip to Moscow for the Miss Universe pageant but he rejected the offer.[25][26] "One source noted that Schiller testified he eventually left Trump's hotel room door and could not say for sure what happened during the remainder of the night."[27]
Republican National Committee
After Schiller left the White House in October 2017, his security company, KS Global Group LLC, was hired by the
Republican National Committee to provide security consultation relating to the committee's 2020 convention.[28]
He is married to his wife, Lena; they have two children.[29]