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Congressman Resigns Over E-Mails to Page

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  • Congressman Resigns Over E-Mails to Page

    Florida Republicans to Meet Monday to Name Replacement
    By LARRY MARGASAK, AP

    WASHINGTON (Sept. 30) - A prominent House Republican has resigned after the revelation that he exchanged raunchy electronic messages with a teenage boy, a former congressional page.

    Rep. Mark Foley, of Florida, who is single, apologized Friday for letting down his family and constituents. Once his resignation letter was read to the House late Friday afternoon, Republicans spent the night trying to explain - six weeks before congressional elections - how this could have happened on their watch.

    Near midnight, they engineered a vote to let the House ethics committee decide whether an investigation is needed.

    Among the Republican explanations during the night:

    The congressional sponsor of the page, Republican Rep. Rodney Alexander, said he was asked by the youth's parents not to pursue the matter, so he dropped it. Pages are high school students who attend classes under congressional supervision and work as messengers.

    Alexander said that before deciding to end his involvement, he passed on what he knew to the chairman of the House Republican campaign organization, Rep. Thomas Reynolds. Reynolds' spokesman, Carl Forti, said "We are not characterizing conversations that Congressman Reynolds may have had or may not have had with other members of Congress on that subject."

    Republican Rep. John Shimkus, chairman of the Page Board that oversees the congressional work-study program for high schoolers, said he did investigate but Foley falsely assured him he was only mentoring the boy.

    The spokesman for Speaker Dennis Hastert, Ron Bonjean, said the top House Republican had not known about the allegations. Shimkus said he learned about them in late 2005.

    Just as Shimkus' explanation was released, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi proposed to the House that its ethics committee investigate and make a preliminary report in 10 days. She demanded to know who knew of the messages, whether Foley had other contacts with pages and when the Republican leadership was notified of Foley's conduct.

    Instead, majority Republicans engineered a vote to allow the ethics panel to decide whether there should even be an investigation.

    Foley's departure sent Republicans scrambling for a replacement candidate.

    Foley, 52, had been a shoo-in for a new term until the e-mail correspondence surfaced in recent days. The page was 16 at the time of the correspondence.

    Foley's resignation further complicates the political landscape for Republicans, who are fighting to retain control of Congress. Democrats need to win a net of 15 Republican seats to regain the power they lost in 1994.

    Florida Republicans planned to meet as soon as Monday to name a replacement in Foley's district, which President George W. Bush won with 55 percent in 2004 and is now in play for November. Though Florida ballots have already been printed with Foley's name and cannot be changed, any votes for Foley will count toward the party's choice.

    Hastert said Friday he had asked Shimkus to investigate the page system. "We want to make sure that all our pages are safe and the page system is safe," Hastert said.

    ABC News reported Friday that Foley also engaged in a series of sexually explicit instant messages with current and former pages, all male. In one message, ABC said, Foley wrote to one page, "Do I make you a little horny?"

    In another message, Foley wrote, "You in your boxers, too?

    Well, strip down and get relaxed."

    Foley, as chairman of the Missing and Exploited Children's Caucus, had introduced legislation in July to protect children from exploitation by adults over the Internet. He also sponsored other legislation designed to protect minors from abuse and neglect.

    "We track library books better than we do sexual predators," Foley has said.

    Foley, who represented an area around Palm Beach County, e-mailed the page in August 2005. Foley asked him how he was doing after Hurricane Katrina and what he wanted for his birthday. The congressman also asked the boy to send a photo of himself, according to excerpts of the e-mails that were originally released by ABC News.

    The e-mails were posted Friday on the Web site of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington after ABC News reported their existence.

    Naomi Seligman, a spokeswoman for CREW, said the group also sent a letter to the FBI after it received the e-mails. CREW did not post their copies of the e-mail until ABC News reported them, instead waiting for the investigation.

    "The House of Representatives has an obligation to protect the teenagers who come to Congress to learn about the legislative process," the group wrote.

    According to the CREW posting, the boy e-mailed a colleague in Alexander's office about Foley's e-mails, saying, "This freaked me out." On the request for a photo, the boy repeated the word "sick" 13 times.

    He said Foley asked for his e-mail when the boy gave him a thank-you card. The boy also said Foley wrote that he had e-mailed another page.

    "he's such a nice guy," Foley wrote about the other boy. "acts much older than his age...and hes in really great shape...i am just finished riding my bike on a 25 mile journey now heading to the gym...whats school like for you this year?"

    In other e-mails, Foley wrote: "I am back in Florida now...its nice here...been raining today...it sounds like you will have some fun over the next few weeks...how old are you now?" and "how are you weathering the hurricane...are you safe...send me an email pic of you as well."

  • #2
    fucking pervert

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    • #3
      how bout that dateline show where they set these guys up with phony 13 year olds in chat rooms and that reporter chris hanson comes out and asks what they are doing there when the pervs go to meet the girls, man that is some funny shit, what is wrong with these people
      Lord Knows I'm A Voodoo Child




      My record Click Here

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Blackbeard
        how bout that dateline show where they set these guys up with phony 13 year olds in chat rooms and that reporter chris hanson comes out and asks what they are doing there when the pervs go to meet the girls, man that is some funny shit, what is wrong with these people
        Didn't see that one, but I seen one about boys and those guys were sick fucks. I think bover was one of the guys

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        • #5
          Originally posted by BettorsChat
          Didn't see that one, but I seen one about boys and those guys were sick fucks. I think bover was one of the guys

          Comment


          • #6
            FBI Examines Foley's E-Mails to Teen Boys
            Former Congressman Seeks Treatment for Alcoholism
            By LARA JAKES JORDAN, AP

            WASHINGTON (Oct. 2) - While GOP leaders scramble to contain the political fallout from the latest Washington sex scandal, the FBI is examining Republican Rep. Mark Foley's e-mail exchanges with teenage boys and Foley announced he has checked himself into an alcohol rehabilitation facility.

            The FBI "is conducting an assessment to see if there's been a violation of federal law," FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said, declining to elaborate.

            Foley announced Monday through his attorney that he had been battling alcoholism and had checked into an unidentified rehabilitation facility for treatment over the weekend. "I strongly believe that I am an alcoholic and have accepted the need for immediate treatment for alcoholism and other behavioral problems," Foley said in a statement released in Florida by his attorney, David Roth.

            "I deeply regret and accept full responsibility for the harm I have caused," Foley said in the statement.

            Foley abruptly quit Congress on Friday after reports surfaced that he'd sent sexually charged electronic messages to boys working as congressional pages.

            The disclosure sent House Republicans into damage control mode amid charges by Democrats that some House leaders may have known for months about Foley's inappropriate overtures toward the young pages.

            House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., in a letter sent Sunday to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, asked the Justice Department to "conduct an investigation of Mr. Foley's conduct with current and former House pages."

            White House counsel Dan Bartlett called the allegations involving Foley shocking, while Democrats demanded that investigators determine whether Republican leaders tried to cover up Foley's actions for political reasons.

            "The attorney general should open a full-scale investigation immediately," Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada said in a statement, including whether GOP leaders "knew there was a problem and ignored it to preserve a congressional seat this election year."

            Foley's district is heavily Republican, but now may be won by a Democrat. Republicans are struggling to maintain their House majority in the upcoming election.

            FBI cyber sleuths are looking into the text of some of the Foley messages, checking to see how many e-mails and instant electronic messages were sent and how many computers were used, according to a law enforcement official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation.

            The FBI also was trying to determine if any of the teenagers who received messages are willing to cooperate with the investigation, the official said.

            Ironically, Foley, who is 52 and single, could be found to have violated a law that he helped to write as co-chairman of the Congressional Missing and Exploited Children's Caucus.

            "Republican leaders have admitted to knowing about Mr.Foley's outrageous behavior for six months to a year, and they chose to cover it up rather than to protect these children," said House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California.

            Rep. Thomas Reynolds of New York, head of the House Republican election effort, said he told Hastert months ago about the allegations involving a 16-year-old boy from Louisiana.

            Hastert acknowledged that his staff had been made aware of concerns about what they termed "over-friendly" e-mails Foley had sent to the teenager -- including one requesting his picture -- in the fall of 2005, and that they referred the matter to the House clerk.

            But Hastert said those e-mails were not viewed as "sexual in nature" and that he was not aware of "a different set of communications which were sexually explicit ... which Mr. Foley reportedly sent another former page or pages."

            Hastert asked the Justice Department to investigate "anyone who had specific knowledge of the content of any sexually explicit communications between Mr. Foley and any former or current House pages and what actions such individuals took, if any, to provide them to law enforcement."

            A Pelosi spokeswoman, Jennifer Crider, late Sunday said that Hastert "seems more concerned by who revealed the Republican leadership coverup of Mr. Foley's Internet stalking of an underage child than he was about ensuring the children entrusted to the House were protected."

            "We need to make sure that the page system is one in which children come up here and can work and make sure that they are protected," said Bartlett, the White House counsel, as he made the rounds of the Sunday morning talk shows.

            Congressional pages, a staple of Washington politics since the 1820s, are high school students who serve as gofers in the House and Senate.

            Republican leaders say it's their duty to ensure House pages' safety, and they're setting up a toll-free hot line for pages and their families to call to confidentially report any incidents. They also will consider adopting new rules on communications between lawmakers and pages.

            Rep. Jane Harman of California, top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said Democrats should have been told about concerns over Foley's conduct. "I gather that basically nothing was done except that Foley was warned," she said on Fox News Sunday.

            "It really makes me nervous that they might have tried to cover this up," said Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., on ABC's "This Week," adding that already "the reputation of Congress under the Republican leadership is lower than used car salesmen."

            AP reporter John Heilprin contributed to this story.

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            • #7
              As chairman of the Missing and Exploited Children's Caucus, Foley introduced legislation in July to protect children from exploitation by adults over the Internet.

              Comment


              • #8
                that show is on almost every week, "to catch a predator" its called I think. Right after the reporter tells them they are free to go, the guy scampers off only to be tackeled by 30 cops!!! its freakin hillarious
                Lord Knows I'm A Voodoo Child




                My record Click Here

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                • #9
                  you playing sick today BB
                  Questions, comments, complaints:
                  [email protected]

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