By Philip Sherwell, New York
7:30PM BST 21 Apr 2012
7:30PM BST 21 Apr 2012
Alarming questions about the reliability and discretion of the elite
bodyguard unit tasked with protecting the lives of America ’s top leaders were being
asked as it appeared increasingly clear that the carousing and womanising was
not a one-off.
Americans were shocked to learn that two of the so-called “dirty dozen” of
agents involved in the incident in Cartagena
were veteran Secret Service officers who were deployed there to supervise the
work of dozens of less experienced agents. The two are among six men who have
already been fired or forced to resign.
It has now emerged that one of them, David Chaney, who is married, posted
photographs on his public Facebook page of himself partying with scantily-clad
women and guarding Sarah Palin. He joked that he was “really checking out” the
former vice-presidential candidate in a comment beneath the picture.
The revelation increases the fear that, far from being a one-off event,
such behaviour may have continued apparently unchecked for many years.
“The fact that he posted up pictures of Sarah Palin and racy images with
other women for everyone to see shows a serious lack of judgement and
discretion,” said a retired agent. “It raises serious questions about the
integrity and efficacy of some members of the service.”
US diplomats are concerned about the impact on the country’s image abroad.
And a former White House aide revealed that the “wings up, rings off” culture
of misbehaviour by some Secret Service agents when they travelled to protect
presidents was pervasive.
“I travelled for years as WH staff advance with the US Secret Service,” he
wrote in an email to National Public Radio in which he asked that his name not
be used.
“There was a culture of adultery among them. The phrase 'What happens on
the road, stays on the road’ was commonly used by them long before Las Vegas started using
it.
“Adulterous behaviour at times seemed to be a badge of honour among some of
them. [There were] many wonderful agents, but among others there was enough of
this type of behaviour [for me] not to be a surprised by what happened in Colombia .”
In the Cartagena
incident, agents brought prostitutes back to their hotel from a nightclub where
they had been drinking two days before Mr Obama’s arrival for a regional
summit. Eleven members of the US
armed forces are also being investigated separately over similar misconduct
allegation.
The Secret Service has sought to portray the scandal as an isolated case
for an agency whose officers are trained to take a bullet for the president and
into whom the necessity of discretion and secrecy is inculcated from the first
day of training.
US politicians and former agents have sought to highlight the
professionalism of the Secret Service and insisted that they do not believe the
behaviour was typical of the agency.
But the focus has now expanded from concerns about potential security
lapses on the Colombia trip to broader fears that a culture of compromising
behaviour exists among agents who guard US leaders — including a team of 200
who travelled with Mr Obama to London.
Mr Chaney, who has about 20 years’ experience with the Secret Service, was
a supervisor in the international programmes division who oversees the work of
junior agents on foreign trips.
The other ousted supervisor, Greg Stokes, also had about two decades of
service and both men were said to have spent “significant time” with the
presidential protection detail.
Mr Chaney’s Facebook page revealed that he had a penchant for carousing in
the company of younger women in exposing outfits.
A belly dancer in a sequined bikini-style top and tight dress performs for
him in one photograph taken during a holiday vacation in Egypt . In
another, he is sandwiched by two attractive women kissing him on each cheek at
a school reunion.
The married agent, who has an adult son, also posted a photograph of him
looking at Mrs Palin from behind her. “Really checking her out”, he noted in
one comment. Mrs Palin responded in a television interview: “Well check this
out, buddy you’re fired!” Mr Obama, who visited Colombia
for the Summit of the Americas , was briefed on the
investigation into the scandal on Friday by Mark Sullivan, the embattled head
of the agency.
Secret service officers are in Cartagena
this weekend to question the women who returned with the agents, club-goers,
hotel workers, taxi drivers as agency investigators to establish what happened
on April 11.
They are also checking whether any of those involved were aged under 18.
Although prostitution is legal in “tolerance zones” in Colombia , any American who pays for sex overseas
with a minor could face prosecution in the US .
Dania Londono Suarez, the 24-year-old woman at the centre of the
controversy, has gone into hiding after revealing photographs of her in a
bikini were published. She earlier told a New York Times reporter that the
scandal erupted after a dispute about her fee with an agent.
She was variously reported to have agreed a payment of between $250 and
$800 with the agent at the nightclub. But the next morning, he would only agree
to pay her about $30 in local currency, she said.
A row broke out and he locked her out of the room. Miss Suarez, who
insisted to the newspaper that she was “an escort, not a prostitute”, was
joined by a woman who had been in another agent’s room as they shouted from
outside the door.
Colombian policemen stationed in the hotel were then alerted, while other
US Secret Service agents tried to block their access to the door. American
diplomats were informed of the incident and they reported the details to Washington , from where
the order was issued for the agents to be recalled.
The men have all had their security clearances cleared while the
investigation continues.
Officials have insisted that the president’s security was not in danger,
that the men’s guns and details of the trip were kept under armed guard in a
secure room and that no evidence of drugs has been found in the rooms.
But concerns about the agents’ ability to conduct their mission and the
danger of blackmail had already been raised, as well as alarm about the
involvement in the Colombian prostitution business of drugs cartels that have
been the long-term targets of US
law enforcement operations.
Now it appears that the Cartagena
incident has exposed a much more far-reaching and dangerous culture within an
agency long held up for its dedication and bravery.
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