Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Report: VA chief sought dirt on accuser

- LISA REIN

WASHINGTON — The Veterans Affairs Department’s inspector general is reviewing a request from a top House leader to investigat­e allegation­s that VA Secretary Robert Wilkie sought to dig up dirt on one of the congressma­n’s aides after she said she was sexually assaulted at VA’s Washington hospital.

The appeal late Friday from House Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Mark Takano, D-Calif., came after he received informatio­n from a senior VA official, confirmed by The Washington

Post, that Wilkie worked to undermine the credibilit­y of the aide, senior policy adviser Andrea Goldstein.

Wilkie, who led the Pentagon’s personnel and readiness operation before his VA appointmen­t, began inquiring with military officials last fall about Goldstein’s past, according to three people with knowledge of his efforts. That’s when Goldstein said a man groped and propositio­ned her in the main lobby of the VA Medical Center in Washington. Authoritie­s closed the case in January without bringing charges.

Over several months, Wilkie shared his findings with his senior staff at morning meetings on at least six occasions, three current or former senior VA officials confirmed. Wilkie said his inquiry into Goldstein’s military service found that the Navy veteran, who currently serves as a Navy Reserve intelligen­ce officer, had filed multiple complaints, according to three people with knowledge of what Wilkie said. Wilkie also served as an intelligen­ce officer in the Navy Reserve.

The informatio­n shared with the committee and with The Post said Wilkie was concerned with Goldstein’s “credibilit­y and military record.” The VA official who shared it said Wilkie described Goldstein to his staff as a “serial sexual assault/ harassment complainan­t in the Navy who made baseless allegation­s for example when she was not satisfied with a fitness evaluation.”

In an interview with The

Post, Goldstein said she filed a formal complaint with the Navy just once in 2014 before her experience at the VA hospital. The Post typically does not name people who report a sexual assault, but Goldstein has spoken publicly about her experience­s.

Wilkie suggested to several people on his staff, including his public affairs chief, that they use the informatio­n to discredit Goldstein, a current and former senior official said. They declined.

Wilkie denied making inquiries into Goldstein’s past. “These allegation­s are false. Period,” James Hutton, VA’s assistant secretary for public affairs, said. “Secretary Wilkie did not and never would do anything of this sort.”

“VA takes all allegation­s of sexual assault seriously, which is why the department immediatel­y reported Ms. Goldstein’s allegation­s to VA’s independen­t inspector general as well as the deputy attorney general,” Hutton said.

Inspector General Michael Missal said he is reviewing Takano’s request to investigat­e. “We take this matter seriously and are considerin­g the request at this time,” he said.

The Post was unable to independen­tly determine whether Wilkie or anyone on his behalf asked to access Goldstein’s service records. “As a matter of policy, the DoD would not support any such improper request if such a request were received,” Defense Department press secretary Alyssa Farah said.

A Takano spokeswoma­n, Jenni Geurink, said in a statement that the committee “has received details from an individual with knowledge of decision making by senior VA leaders that shows they attempted to gather ‘damaging informatio­n’ about a member of our staff and may have improperly utilized government time and resources to do so.”

Missal said this week that the Goldstein case is closed. After a case is closed, it is common practice not to release a confidenti­al internal report of investigat­ion, not even through a public records request — or to a Cabinet member.

 ?? (AP/Andrew Harnik) ?? Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie, shown in the White House briefing room in November, denied allegation­s that he made inquiries about the past of a congressma­n’s aide, according to an agency spokesman.
(AP/Andrew Harnik) Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie, shown in the White House briefing room in November, denied allegation­s that he made inquiries about the past of a congressma­n’s aide, according to an agency spokesman.

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