No House punishments in Foley flap

Published: Saturday, Dec. 9 2006 12:00 a.m. MST

WASHINGTON — The only thing missing from the House ethics committee's sordid account of former Rep. Mark Foley's sexual advances to former teenage pages: punishment.

Everybody escaped discipline.

The committee found that no rules were broken in Republicans' handling of Foley's sexual come-ons to former male pages.

The Florida Republican, described by one witness as a "ticking time bomb," would have been disciplined, the committee said, but his resignation in late September took him out of the House's jurisdiction.

The report released Friday said Republican lawmakers and aides for a decade failed to protect the teenagers vulnerable to his advances.

The committee harshly criticized Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., saying the evidence showed he was told of the problem months before he acknowledged learning of Foley's questionable e-mails to a former Louisiana page. It rejected Hastert's contention that he couldn't recall separate warnings from two House Republican leaders.

Hastert said he was pleased the committee found "there was no violation of any House rules by any member or staff."

He added that no evidence was uncovered that salacious instant messages from Foley — which surfaced after the scandal became public — were known to any House member or employee before that time.

But the committee concluded that Hastert's chief of staff, Scott Palmer, was told about Foley's inappropriate conduct in 2002 or 2003 — a finding based on testimony from Foley's former chief of staff, Kirk Fordham.

Palmer said he didn't recall the warning, although Fordham even described the room where they met.

Overall, the evidence shows that "concerns began to arise about Rep. Foley's interactions with pages or other young male staff members" shortly after he took office in 1995, according to the committee report.

The report, prepared by a four-member subcommittee, described "a disconcerting unwillingness to take responsibility for resolving issues regarding Foley's conduct."

Lawmakers and aides "failed to exercise appropriate diligence and oversight" regarding the interactions between Foley and pages, the report said.

Although the committee recommended no punishments, it said the evidence would have subjected Foley to discipline if the Florida Republican had not resigned — taking himself out of the House's jurisdiction.

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