Lawmakers,
following a request from the House Ethics Committee, are
surveying aides and former House pages to find out if any of
them had knowledge of ex-congressman Mark Foley's
inappropriate conduct toward male pages. In a separate
investigation, the FBI was to meet Tuesday in Oklahoma
City with a former page who may have received suggestive
electronic messages from Foley, the former page's attorney said.
The two probes center on the nature of Foley's
relationship with pages, teenage errand-runners for
members of Congress. The House Ethics Committee
inquiry was moving quickly.
Charlie Keller, spokesman for Republican
congresswoman Ginny Brown-Waite of Florida, said
she contacted two pages before receiving the committee
request and asked if they were aware of inappropriate
behavior from Foley, any other lawmaker, or staff
members. Both said they were not.
Aides for other House members reported similar
results Monday. The Ethics Committee leaders, in a
letter to all House members, asked them to contact
current and former pages they sponsored to learn whether any
of them had ''inappropriate communications or
interactions'' with Foley or any other House member.
The ethics panel, formally known as the
Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, also
directed lawmakers to cast a wide net and ask aides
what they might have heard about improper approaches by
Foley or others to pages before revelations about his
sexually explicit Internet messages surfaced last
month. Foley resigned September 29.
In Oklahoma City, meanwhile, attorney Stephen
Jones said that his client, Jordan Edmund, would be
questioned by the FBI on Tuesday, The Oklahoman
newspaper reported. Edmund, a Californian, has been
living in Oklahoma City and working as a deputy
campaign manager for the gubernatorial campaign of
Republican congressman Ernest Istook.
Edmund was a U.S. House page in 2001 and 2002.
The FBI is investigating whether Foley sent Edmund
inappropriate e-mails.
Meanwhile, the lawyer for Kirk Fordham, Foley's
former chief of staff, said Monday that his client
could testify before the committee as early as this
week. Fordham has said he informed House speaker Dennis
Hastert's staff in 2003 about Foley's inappropriate
messages to pages.
Timothy Heaphy, Fordham's lawyer, said he
contacted the Ethics Committee on Friday and was told
Fordham could appear this week to provide sworn
testimony. The Ethics Committee's four-person investigative
subcommittee said it approved nearly four dozen
subpoenas for testimony and documents, although many
witnesses are expected to testify voluntarily without the
need for a subpoena. J. Randolph Evans, Hastert's
lawyer, said, ''We are working to cooperate fully,''
but he did not know when Hastert may appear.
Fordham is a key figure because of his
statements that he notified Hastert's staff about
Foley in 2003 and possibly as far back as 2002. His
statements have been rebutted by Hastert chief of staff
Scott Palmer, who denied having a discussion with
Fordham about Foley. A major task of the ethics panel
will be to determine who is telling the truth.
Heaphy, Fordham's attorney, said that after his
client's conversation with Palmer, Fordham ''was told
by Palmer and Foley'' that the speaker's chief of
staff and the lawmaker had met. Heaphy was not present at
the meeting.
There are other instances in which Foley was
said to have been confronted years ago with complaints
about his behavior regarding pages. In 2000 or 2001,
Foley was approached by Republican congressman Jim
Kolbe of Arizona, or someone in Kolbe's office, about
what were described as ''creepy'' e-mails to a page,
said Kolbe's press secretary Korenna Cline on Monday.
Cline said the page had come to Kolbe's office
with e-mails that were described as making the page
uncomfortable. A year earlier, Kolbe had served on a
five-person board that oversaw the page program.
''We felt we took the appropriate action at the
time,'' Cline said. She said a member of Kolbe's staff
saw the same former page in a social setting last week
and suggested that the page take the information to the
House clerk's office. Kolbe is the only openly gay
Republican now serving in Congress. He is retiring at
the end of this year.
In a CBS News-New York Times poll
released Monday, four in five said GOP leaders were
more concerned with politics than with the well-being
of the congressional pages. Nearly half of those
polled, 46%, said Hastert should step down, while 26% said
he shouldn't.
But voters have their doubts about how the
Democrats would have handled the page scandal, with
75% in an ABC News-Washington Post poll saying
Democrats would not have done any better.
The Ethics Committee is led by Chairman Doc
Hastings, a Washington State Republican, and ranking
Democrat Howard Berman of California, who appointed
themselves to lead a four-person investigative subcommittee.
The letter from the two leaders to all members said they
expected that lawmakers with information would contact
the subcommittee; it also asked lawmakers to
question their staff members about whether they have
any relevant information. (Larry Margasak, AP)