Nearly all of the questions about neglect in the Mark Foley scandal relate to the House GOP leadership and what some are calling The Foley Five — House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.), House Majority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio), and Reps. Tom Reynolds (R-N.Y.), John Shimkus (R-Ill.), and Rodney Alexander (R-La.) — all of whom were made aware of Foley’s emails.
But there’s also the FBI to consider. The law enforcement agency has opened a preliminary inquiry, but as Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) noted today, it received copies of the emails that started this scandal on July 21, 2006. Suspecting possible illegalities, CREW forwarded the emails to the FBI. Like the House GOP leadership, there’s no evidence the FBI did much of anything to deal with the issue.
“As a former prosecutor who handled sex crimes in the District of Columbia, the emails set off alarm bells. Grown men simply do not send emails requesting photographs to teenagers over whom they have had some degree of authority,” Melanie Sloan, executive director of CREW wrote today.
It appears only now, at the instigation of the House of Representatives leadership’s request, that the FBI has begun a preliminary investigation into former Rep. Foley’s conduct. Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert sent a letter to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales requesting an investigation into Rep. Foley’s actions as well as who knew about Rep. Foley’s conduct, when they knew it and why they did not forward that information to law enforcement authorities.
Sloan stated today, “Since the FBI has known about Rep. Foley’s emails since July, the question arises: Did the administration help to cover up Rep. Foley’s conduct and leave a potential sexual predator on the loose? Was the administration more concerned with protecting a powerful ally in Congress than with protecting children?”
Three entities saw Foley’s emails earlier this year: House GOP leaders, the FBI, and a non-profit organization called CREW. Unfortunately, only one took the notes seriously, and it’s the one that isn’t directly accountable to the public.
CREW today asked the Inspector General at the Department of Justice to investigate why the FBI did not pursue an investigation of the Foley emails. It seems like a reasonable question.