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		 DEA 
		chief to step down, Congress probes sex party leaks 
		
		 
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		[April 22, 2015] 
		By Mark Hosenball 
		  
		 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Drug 
		Enforcement Administration's chief will step down within weeks, the 
		Obama administration said on Tuesday, as a congressional panel planned 
		to examine whether DEA agents divulged secrets at sex parties that 
		Colombian drug lords may have staged. 
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			 Michele Leonhart will leave as DEA administrator in mid-May, said 
			a statement from the Justice Department, which contains the DEA and 
			other major law enforcement agencies. 
			 
			"I want to express my appreciation to Michele, not only for her 
			leadership of the DEA since 2007, but also for her 35 years of 
			extraordinary service to the DEA," Attorney General Eric Holder said 
			in the statement. 
			 
			Leonhart was grilled in a congressional hearing last week about the 
			parties attended by prostitutes, which took place in Colombia 
			between 2001 and 2005. U.S. officials said the DEA did not 
			investigate the parties until years later. 
			 
			The Justice Department statement did not give a reason for 
			Leonhart's decision to retire. A DEA spokesman could not immediately 
			be reached for comment. 
			 
			A spokeswoman for the Republican majority of the House of 
			Representatives Committee on Oversight and Government Reform said 
			the panel's leaks inquiry would also examine the culture and 
			leadership of the DEA and other investigative agencies. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			Leonhart's testimony at the hearing, supplemented by two U.S. 
			government reports, raised concern among lawmakers that agents might 
			have leaked secrets about their investigations that found their way 
			to Colombian drug lords. 
			 
			"It is incredibly concerning that, according to the DEA itself, 
			there is a clear possibility that information was compromised as a 
			result of these sex parties," Representative Elijah Cummings, the 
			committee's top Democrat, told Reuters. 
			 
			Leonhart told the panel there was "no evidence" that sensitive 
			information had been leaked but also acknowledged it was 
			"absolutely" possible that information had been compromised. 
			 
			After the Justice Department announced her departure, Cummings and 
			Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz called Leonhart's retirement 
			appropriate in light of "the testimony we heard before our 
			committee" and an earlier report from the Justice Department's 
			inspector general. 
			 
			The inspector general's office could not immediately be reached for 
			comment. 
			 
			CONFIDENTIAL DEA REPORT 
			 
			Oversight Committee officials disclosed to Reuters excerpts from a 
			once-confidential internal DEA report which quoted an agency 
			informant alleging that U.S. agents who took part in the parties had 
			compromised sensitive information. 
			 
			One informant, identified by the committee as "Cooperator 2," was 
			quoted in an excerpt from the DEA report alleging that he believed a 
			second informant ("Cooperator 1") had "gained information from the 
			U.S. agents by 'getting their guard down' through the use of 
			prostitutes and paying for parties." 
			 
			
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			The report says Cooperator 1 "bragged about the parties with 
			prostitutes and how he 'sold' the relationship/closeness with the 
			agents" to Cooperator 2. 
			 
			According to the report, Cooperator 1 also "stated he could easily 
			get the agents to talk." 
			 
			JUSTICE DEPARTMENT PROBE 
			 
			Allegations of sexual harassment and sexual misconduct at the DEA, 
			the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. Marshals Service and 
			the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were also 
			examined in a March report by the Justice Department's inspector 
			general. 
			 
			In a case study, the inspector general said DEA's internal affairs 
			office in 2009 and 2010 received allegations from "former 
			host-country police officers" that several DEA agents, including 
			senior supervisors, had "solicited prostitutes and engaged in other 
			serious misconduct" while stationed in the unnamed country. U.S. 
			officials said the country was Colombia. 
			 
			The report said that "sex parties" financed by "local drug cartels" 
			took place over "several years" inside offices leased by the DEA. A 
			DEA supervisor told the inspector general's office that it was 
			"common for prostitutes to be present at business meetings involving 
			cartel members and foreign officers." 
			 
			The inspector general's report said "prostitutes in the agents' 
			quarters could easily have had access to sensitive DEA equipment and 
			information." It did not explicitly allege that such materials had 
			been compromised. 
			  
			
			
			  
			
			 
			The House Judiciary Committee said it too will continue 
			investigating alleged misconduct at the DEA. 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Julia Edwards and Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing 
			by Kevin Drawbaugh, Howard Goller and Jonathan Oatis) 
			
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