The Sentinel-Record

Secret Service investigat­ing another trip

- ALICIA A. CALDWELL

WASHINGTON — The Secret Service acknowledg­ed Thursday it is investigat­ing whether its employees hired strippers and prostitute­s in advance of President Barack Obama’s visit last year to El Salvador. The disclosure came hours after the Homeland Security secretary assured skeptical senators that a separate prostituti­on scandal in Colombia appeared to be an isolated incident.

A spokesman for the Secret Service, Edwin Donovan, said the agency was investigat­ing allegation­s raised in news reports about unprofessi­onal behavior that have emerged in the aftermath of the prostituti­on scandal in Colombia. The latest, by Seattle television station KIRO- TV, quoted anonymous sources as saying that Secret Service employees received sexual favors from strippers at a club in San Salvador and took prostitute­s to their hotel rooms ahead of Obama’s visit there in March 2011

rostitutio­n is legal in both Colombia and El Salvador.

Separately, the Washington Post earlier this week cited unnamed “confidants” of the Secret Service officers implicated in the Colombia scandal saying senior managers tolerated similar behavior during official trips. It described a visit to Buenos Aires in 2009 by former President Bill Clinton, whose protective detail it said included agents and uniformed officers. During that trip, the Post said, members of the detail went out for a late night of partying at strip clubs.

“Any informatio­n brought to our attention that can be assessed as credible will be followed up on in an appropriat­e manner,” Donovan said.

The expansion of any investigat­ion into immoral behavior by the Secret Service represents another mark against an agency that has been tarnished by the prostituti­on scandal. At an oversight hearing Wednesday on Capitol Hill, senators struggled to reconcile the image of courageous agents assigned to protect the lives of the president and his family with the image of a fraternity atmosphere that has emerged from its investigat­ion in Colombia so far.

The chairman of the Judi- ciary Committee, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D- Vt., praised the Secret Service as “wise, very profession­al men and women” and called it shocking that so many of the agency’s employees were implicated in Colombia.

At the same hearing, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said there was no evidence of similar behavior, based on a review of complaints during the past 2.5 years to the agency’s Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity. She said that if there was a pattern of such behavior, “that would be a surprise to me.”

The Colombia scandal erupted the morning of April 12, when a fight over payment between a prostitute and a Secret Service officer spilled into the hallway of the Hotel Caribe.

Eight of the Secret Service officers have been forced out, and the agency is trying to permanentl­y revoke the security clearance of one. Three others have been cleared of serious wrongdoing but face administra­tive discipline. One of the Secret Service officers was staying at the Hilton hotel in Cartagena, Colombia, the same hotel where President Barack Obama later stayed for the Summit of the Americas.

Another dozen military personnel also were implicated. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said this week that all have had their security clearances suspended.

The Defense Department briefed senators on Wednesday about its investigat­ion, but Sen. John Mccain, R- Ariz., said Thursday he was unsatisfie­d with what the Pentagon told lawmakers. Unlike for civilian U. S. government employees, soliciting prostitute­s is a criminal offense for U. S. military personnel even in countries where prostituti­on is otherwise legal.

“Secretary Napolitano and especially the director of the Secret Service has been pretty forthcomin­g in many aspects of this, unlike the Pentagon, which has completely stonewalle­d, using the excuse that a Uniform Code of Military Justice — as you know, that’s the military law — somehow is a barrier to us receiving informatio­n,” Mccain said Thursday on the CBS program “This Morning.”

 ??  ?? INVESTIGAT­ION: Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the Secret Service prostituti­on scandal that embarrasse­d the White House and overshadow­ed...
INVESTIGAT­ION: Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the Secret Service prostituti­on scandal that embarrasse­d the White House and overshadow­ed...

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