San Diego Union-Tribune

WATCHDOG FAULTS VA CHIEF OVER SEX ASSAULT REPORT

Says Wilkie acted unprofessi­onally in handling allegation

- BY HOPE YEN

WASHINGTON

Confronted with a sexual assault allegation at a veterans hospital, Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie repeatedly sought to discredit the congressio­nal aide who made the complaint and his staff worked to spread negative informatio­n about her while ignoring known problems of harassment at the facility, according to an investigat­ive report released Thursday.

The 47-page report by the VA’s internal watchdog paints a portrait of a department led by senior officials who were indifferen­t, if not hostile, to the issues at the department’s flagship medical center in the nation’s capital. It found that Wilkie acted unprofessi­onally if not unethicall­y, in the case of Navy veteran Andrea Goldstein, a policy adviser to Democratic Rep. Mark Takano of California, chairman of the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee.

Associated Press policy is not to name victims or possible victims of sexual assault. Goldstein agreed to be publicly identified.

Wilkie and other senior officials declined to fully cooperate with the investigat­ion. For that reason, VA Inspector General Michael Missal said he could not conclude whether Wilkie had acted illegally, allegedly by personally digging into the woman’s past and working with a Republican congressma­n to dismiss her as a repeat complainer.

Wilkie said the allegation­s are false. “After nearly a year of investigat­ion, interviews with 65 people and analysis of nearly 1.5 million documents, VA’s inspector general cannot substantia­te that I sought to investigat­e or asked others to investigat­e the veteran,” Wilkie said.

Takano called on Wilkie to resign.

Goldstein said the report confirmed that Wilkie’s response “was not to take ownership and ensure accountabi­lity, but to investigat­e me and attempt to impugn my character.” She said she hopes Wilkie’s successor “will center and prioritize eradicatin­g sexual violence at VA, and actively work to gain women veterans’ trust.”

The findings are a black eye for a department that has seen improved performanc­e and veterans’ satisfacti­on with VA care under the Trump administra­tion. But there also has been persistent turmoil, ethical challenges and disarray in its leadership. The department has received particular criticism for an unwelcomin­g culture for female veterans, the military’s fastest growing subgroup.

“The response of Secretary Wilkie and senior VA officials to the veteran’s complaint of sexual assault was troubling,” Missal said in a statement. “Scrutinizi­ng the veteran’s background is contrary to VA’s stated goal to serve veterans with respect. Every VA employee should commit to making VA facilities safe and welcoming places where such complaints are met with the highest standards of profession­alism and responsive­ness.”

According to the report, Wilkie showed undue defensiven­ess after learning of the complaint in late 2019. He referred the matter as requested to the inspector general but spent parts of leadership meetings dismissing her concerns as politicall­y motivated, the report said.

It said former VA Deputy Secretary Jim Byrne testified that Wilkie indicated to staff he had gathered negative informatio­n from the Pentagon and Rep. Dan Crenshaw, RTexas, who knew Goldstein when she was in the Navy, and that she had made frivolous complaints previously.

The inspector general could not conclusive­ly confirm that Wilkie improperly investigat­ed her, in part because of his refusal to fully cooperate. But the report said they had “substantia­l sworn testimony” from staff of Wilkie repeatedly belittling her. Crenshaw denies discussing the case with Wilkie.

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Robert Wilkie

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