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GSA - EAT YOUR HEART OUT ?
Rot starts at the top IN DEPARTMENTS LIKE THIS
AND NOW COME'S THE SECRET SERVICE PARTY'S
Their CIC has broken and ignored more laws and rules than they could in a lifetime
_News Alert from The Wall Street Journal
The Secret Service is investigating allegations that 11 agents on President Barack Obama’s security detail to Colombia brought prostitutes back to their hotel rooms, in a widening scandal that may also involve five military service personnel, officials said Saturday. The Secret Service agents were caught when one of the women stayed in an agent’s room past 7 a.m., in violation of hotel policy, said Rep. Peter King (R., N.Y.), chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, which oversees the Secret Service.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304356604577344392936572700.html?mod
_News Alert from The Wall Street Journal
The Secret Service is investigating allegations that 11 agents on President Barack Obama’s security detail to Colombia brought prostitutes back to their hotel rooms, in a widening scandal that may also involve five military service personnel, officials said Saturday. The Secret Service agents were caught when one of the women stayed in an agent’s room past 7 a.m., in violation of hotel policy, said Rep. Peter King (R., N.Y.), chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, which oversees the Secret Service.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304356604577344392936572700.html?mod
=djemalertNEWS
By LAURA MECKLER
CARTAGENA,
Colombia—The Secret Service put 11 agents on administrative leave
Saturday amid allegations they brought prostitutes back to their hotel
rooms while preparing for a visit by President Barack Obama, a widening
scandal that may also involve five military service personnel, officials
said Saturday.
The Secret Service agents were caught when
one of the women stayed in an agent's room past 7 a.m., in violation of
hotel policy, said Rep. Peter King (R., N.Y.), chairman of the House
Homeland Security Committee, which oversees the Secret Service. That
agent initially refused to open his door for the hotel manager, which
prompted the manager to call the police, who later reported the incident
to the U.S. embassy, Mr. King said.
Also
Saturday, the United States Southern Command said in a written
statement that five U.S. service members assigned to the summit violated
curfew and "may have been involved in inappropriate conduct." The
statement continued: "The conduct is alleged to have occurred in the
same hotel where the recalled United States Secret Service agents were
staying."
The
military personnel are confined to their quarters in Colombia and under
orders not to have contact with other individuals. They will return to
the U.S. after the mission is complete, the statement said. An
investigation will follow. The Secret Service agents involved in the
incident, which occurred Wednesday night, were sent home and replaced by
other Secret Service personnel before Mr. Obama arrived on Friday,
officials said.
General
Douglas Fraser, commander of the U.S. military's Southern Command, said
that he is "disappointed by the entire incident and that this behavior
is not in keeping with the professional standards expected of members of
the United States military."
"NO SHIT" CLICK BELOW TO READ MORE
Secret
Service Assistant Director Paul S. Morrissey said in a statement that
11 agents had been put on leave following interviews in Washington about
the incident on Saturday. He said the group included both special
agents and Uniformed Division officers.
He
said the situation had "had no impact on the Secret Service's ability
to execute a comprehensive security plan for the President's visit to
Cartagena."
"This
incident is not reflective of the behavior of our personnel as they
travel every day throughout the country and the world performing their
duties in a dedicated, professional manner," he added. "We regret any
distraction from the Summit of the Americas this situation has caused."
Mr.
Obama is attending the weekend Summit of the Americas, a gathering of
dozens of regional leaders, as more details emerge about the potential
security breach. Mr. Obama is pressing for trade and economic advances
while addressing regional grievances against U.S. policies, but the
incident is threatening to overshadow the weekend's agenda.
Mr. Obama was notified of the situation on Friday, a spokesman said.
The
Secret Service declined to give details of the alleged misconduct. Mr.
King, who said he was briefed by the Secret Service, said it appears the
Secret Service personnel brought women back to the Hotel Caribe
Wednesday night.
He
said hotel policy requires that people visiting hotel guests leave
identification at the front desk, and depart by 7 a.m. At 7 a.m., hotel
personnel noticed one woman had not yet left the hotel, he said.
The
hotel manager went to the room, occupied by a Secret Service agent, who
would not open the door, Mr. King said. The manager called the police,
after which the agent let them in. The woman wouldn't leave, claiming
she was owed money by the agent. The agent denied owing her money but
paid anyway, Mr. King said. The woman left and the situation was
resolved without arrests.
Whenever
the police become involved with an incident involving someone from
another country, they file a report with the relevant embassy, Mr. King
said. At the U.S. embassy, some Secret Service personnel saw the report
and began an immediate investigation, he said.
He said the special agent in charge of the Miami field office heard about the incident and began her own investigation.
The
director of the Secret Service, Mark Sullivan, decided the agents
needed to be brought back to Washington, where they are based,
immediately, Mr. King said. Their duties were filled by other agents
from Miami and Puerto Rico, who were in place before Mr. Obama arrived,
he said, adding, "there was no gap in security."
Mr. King said he was disturbed by the situation because of the potential compromise to the president's security.
"You
can't have Secret Service agents compromising themselves or putting
themselves in a position where they could be threatened or blackmailed,"
he said. "That ultimately threatens the safety of the president."
He
added that bringing strangers like this into a potentially secure area
is "just wrong." In addition, he said, they might have overheard
sensitive information. Plus, he noted, the hotel manager had seen the
women's identifications.
"The hotel manager can blackmail you for the rest of your life," he said.
Mr.
King said he was pleased how Mr. Sullivan, the agency director, handled
the situation, and said he has "a lot of faith" in him.
"I'm
not going to indict the entire Secret Service because of this," he
said. "The question is what you can do to minimize them from happening
and how do you take action to make sure it does not happen again and
conduct is not being tolerated."
He said none of the 11 agents involved had any prior offenses or irregularities.
He added he plans to have his Homeland Security Committee staff look into the situation.
Ronald
Kessler, a Washington-based author who wrote a book about the Secret
Service, called it "the biggest scandal in Secret Service history," he
said.
Prostitution
is generally illegal in Colombia but the country has "tolerance zones"
where the activity is essentially ignored by the police. It's not clear
if the hotel was in one of those zones.
White House spokesman Jay Carney said the president has full confidence in the Secret Service and its ability to protect him.
He said none of the 11 agents involved had any prior offenses or irregularities.
He added he plans to have his Homeland Security Committee staff look into the situation.
Ronald Kessler, a Washington-based author
who wrote a book about the Secret Service, called it "the biggest
scandal in Secret Service history," he said.
Prostitution
is generally illegal in Colombia, but the country has "tolerance zones"
where the activity is essentially ignored by the police. It's not clear
whether the hotel was in one of those zones.
White House spokesman Jay Carney said the president has full confidence in the Secret Service and its ability to protect him.
Write to Laura Meckler at laura.meckler@wsj.com
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