Panel Questions Republican on Page Board

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WASHINGTON (AP) – The House ethics committee Thursday questioned the one-time chief of staff to Rep. Mark Foley, who challenged Speaker Dennis Hastert’s account of his office’s first notification of Mr. Foley’s conduct toward male pages.

Kirk Fordham gave crucial testimony behind closed doors as investigators sought to learn who is telling the truth. Mr. Fordham said he gave the information to Hastert chief of staff Scott Palmer in 2002 or 2003, but Mr. Palmer has disputed Mr. Fordham’s account. Mr. Hastert’s office said his staff was first told about Mr. Foley last fall.

Before Mr. Fordham appeared, a Republican member of the House page board, which oversees the program for teenagers, said she was never told about Mr. Foley.

Rep. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., said after her questioning, “I’m a member of the page board who was not informed of the e-mail messages that were sent. I want the investigation to go forth quickly and reach a conclusion.”

Ms. Capito’s Democratic opponent had earlier accused her of failing to protect the high schoolers in the page program.

Keeping Ms. Capito out of the loop would raise questions about whether other Republicans tried to tell as few people as possible about Foley as part of a cover up. She is one of three members of Congress who serve on the page board. Rep. Dale Kildee of Michigan, the lone Democrat, also said he was not told about Mr. Foley.

Ms. Capito’s testimony preceded that of Mr. Foley’s chief of staff, Kirk Fordham, who was ready to directly question the truthfulness of Speaker Dennis Hastert’s top aide.

Mr. Fordham said he could demonstrate that he warned Mr. Hastert’s chief of staff Scott Palmer about Mr. Foley’s approaches to male pages in 2002 or 2003. Mr. Palmer has challenged Mr. Fordham’s description of events.

Ms. Capito said she knew nothing about the allegations until Sept. 29, when Mr. Foley’s conduct became a major Capitol Hill scandal.

“It disturbs me greatly. I am very upset about it and I think it is disgusting, quite frankly,” Ms. Capito said in a West Virginia debate Wednesday after her opponent accused her of shirking her responsibility. She has called for more members on the page board, more training for those members, and peer counseling for the pages.

According to a timeline released by Mr. Hastert, the speaker’s office was informed about an overly friendly e-mail that Mr. Foley sent in the fall of 2005. Subsequently, the clerk of the House and Rep. John Shimkus, R-Ill., head of the page board, met with Foley, who assures them he was only acting as a mentor to the boy. Mr. Shimkus ordered Mr. Foley to cease contact with the boy, apparently without notifying Mr. Kildee or Ms. Capito.

Mr. Shimkus will testify Friday.

At a recent news conference, the speaker said that Mr. Shimkus was following the wishes of the parents of the former page by not telling other page board members about it.

“I think Congressman Shimkus acted in an expedited manner to find out what happened, again with what the framework of what the family concern was,” Mr. Hastert said.

Mr. Shimkus also said he did not inform the other board members because he was following the wishes of the boy’s parents.

Meanwhile, House Majority Leader John Boehner has been invited by the ethics panel to testify, but no date has been set. Mr. Boehner has said he informed Mr. Hastert about Mr. Foley and was told the matter was being handled. Mr. Hastert has said he doesn’t recall the conversation.

Mr. Hastert’s aides said they first learned of an overly friendly Foley e-mail to a former page in the fall of 2005 – and never knew about sexually explicit messages to others until late last month when they became public.

The FBI also is investigating, trying to determine whether any crimes were committed by Mr. Foley.

While the ethics committee will try to learn who’s telling the truth, the court of public opinion appeared to be moving against the Republicans, who hold majorities in the House and Senate.

Polls show most Americans say the House Republican leadership worried more about politics than the safety of teenage pages. However, most also say Democrats would not have handled the situation better.

Several polls also show a split on whether Mr. Hastert should step down, with just under half of those surveyed saying he should. More than half in several polls said Hastert tried to cover up what he knew about Mr. Foley.

Next week, the ethics panel also is to hear from Rep. Rodney Alexander, R-La., whose testimony also is poised to raise questions about how GOP leaders handled the Foley problem. A former page he sponsored from Louisiana received friendly e-mails from Foley that were not sexually explicit but raised questions about Mr. Foley’s motives.

The former page contacted Mr. Alexander’s office about Mr. Foley in fall 2005. Foley, R-Fla., had asked the boy’s age – then 16 – and his birthday. Mr. Foley also requested a photo.

There is no dispute that Mr. Alexander’s chief of staff, who also will be questioned, called Mr. Hastert’s office. This, according to a report by Mr. Hastert, was the initial notification that something was wrong.

Last spring, Mr. Alexander mentioned the Foley situation to Mr. Boehner, R-Ohio. Mr. Alexander said Mr. Boehner referred him to Rep. Tom Reynolds, R-N.Y., chairman of the House Republican campaign organization.

Both Mr. Boehner and Mr. Reynolds said they spoke with Mr. Hastert, who says he cannot recall those conversations and raised questions about whether they occurred.

Mr. Boehner initially quoted Mr. Hastert as telling him the Louisiana page’s complaint “had been taken care of.”

Mr. Foley resigned Sept. 29 after his sexually explicit instant messages to former pages became public.


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