San Antonio Express-News

Watchdog backs rumors about Texas’ Jackson

- By Catie Edmondson

The Department of Defense inspector general concluded in an unreleased report that Rep. Ronny Jackson, R-texas, “disparaged” his subordinat­es, including pounding on the door of a woman who worked for him in the middle of the night during a presidenti­al trip, and engaged in problemati­c drinking while working as the top White House physician.

The report shed light on several rumors that had dogged Jackson beginning in 2018, after former President Donald Trump nominated him to lead the Veterans Affairs Department.

After allegation­s emerged that Jackson had improperly distribute­d prescripti­on drugs, created a hostile work environmen­t and had problems with drinking, the White House withdrew his nomination.

Jackson went on to win a crowded Republican primary race to represent a district in northeaste­rn Texas and was elected to Congress in 2020.

The 37-page report, first described by CNN, painted a picture of a physician who engaged in reckless and sometimes threatenin­g behavior, creating an uncomforta­ble environmen­t for subordinat­es.

Most of the 60 witnesses interviewe­d by investigat­ors said Jackson had created a negative work environmen­t, and nearly all of them said they had either personally witnessed, experience­d or heard from colleagues about his “screaming, cursing, or belittling subordinat­es.”

Investigat­ors also found that Jackson engaged in inappropri­ate behavior on trips abroad with Trump and former President Barack Obama, whom he also served.

In 2014, ahead of a trip to Manila, Philippine­s, witnesses said Jackson told a male subordinat­e that he thought a female medical profession­al they were working with had a nice figure, using colorful language, and that he would “like to see more of her tattoos.”

While in Manila, witnesses said Jackson went out on the town for a night of drinking and came back to the hotel where the medical team was staying and began yelling and pounding on the female subordinat­e’s hotel room door between 1 and 2 a.m. while “visibly intoxicate­d.” Witnesses said he was so noisy they worried he’d wake Obama.

“He had kind of bloodshot eyes,” the woman recalled to investigat­ors.

“You could smell the alcohol on his breath, and he leaned into my room, and he said, ‘I need you.’ I felt really uncomforta­ble.”

On a separate trip to Argentina with Trump, a witness recalled that Jackson “smelled of alcohol” as he assumed his duties as the primary physician on the trip and recalled that the doctor had a beer a few hours before going on duty, in defiance of a policy preventing White House medical personnel from drinking on presidenti­al trips. Jackson previously had recounted to witnesses that he found that rule to be “stupid,” investigat­ors found.

Former subordinat­es interviewe­d by investigat­ors also raised the concern that Jackson took Ambien, a powerful sleep-aid medication, to help him sleep during long overseas travel. Though it appears Jackson never was called on to provide medical care after he had taken the drug, his subordinat­es worried that it could have left him incapacita­ted and unable to perform his duties.

In a lengthy statement, Jackson accused the inspector general of resurrecti­ng “false allegation­s” because “I have refused to turn my back on President Trump.”

“I flat out reject any allegation that I consumed alcohol while on duty,” Jackson said. “I also categorica­lly deny any implicatio­n that I was in any way sexually inappropri­ate at work, outside of work, or anywhere with any member of my staff or anyone else. That is not me and what is alleged did not happen.”

In a fact sheet also provided to reporters, Jackson’s office noted that Obama promoted him to rear admiral “after the alleged events” outlined in the report and that the then-president had profusely praised him for his work.

 ?? Manuel Balce Ceneta / Associated Press file photo ?? A report details misconduct of Ronny Jackson, now a Texas congressma­n, as White House physician.
Manuel Balce Ceneta / Associated Press file photo A report details misconduct of Ronny Jackson, now a Texas congressma­n, as White House physician.

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