Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Emanuela Orlandi Was 'Kidnapped For Vatican Sex Parties,' Claims Father Gabriele Amorth


Posted:  Updated: 05/22/2012 6:18 pm
Emanuela Orlandi Vatican Sex Parties
An undated file photo showing Italian teenager Emanuela Orlandi, the daughter of a Vatican employee, believed to have been kidnapped after a music lesson in Rome on June 22, 1983, when she was 15-years-old. (AP Photo, File)
The Holy See was directly involved in thedisappearance of 15-year-old Emanuela Orlandi in 1983, according to a contentious accusation by the Catholic Church's leading exorcist. The Rev. Gabriele Amorth claimed that the girl's kidnapping was a "crime of a sexual nature."
"Parties were organized, with a Vatican gendarme acting as the 'recruiter' of the girls," Amorth told La Stampa, according to a translation by The Telegraph. "The network involved diplomatic personnel from a foreign embassy to the Holy See. I believe Emanuela ended up a victim of this circle."
Amorth, who was appointed by Pope John Paul II and has carried out more than 70,000 exorcisms, is no stranger to controversial public statements; according to The Sun, the exorcist has called Harry Potter the "work of the devil," and has claimed "the devil was at work in the Vatican" when discussing the Catholic Church's sex scandals.
Clues to the missing girl's whereabouts had pointed in several directions, including toward a Turkish gunman who attempted to assassinate Pope John Paul IIThe Telegraph reports.
On May 14, one rumor led Italian police to exhume the grave of Enrico De Pedis, a member of Rome's Magliana mob who was killed in 1990, the Associated Pressreports. A one-time girlfriend previously said De Pedis committed the kidnapping, and an anonymous call to a television show in 2005 suggested clues on Orlandi's fate lay in the dead mobster's tomb in Basilica of Sant’Apollinaire. A set of bones not belonging to De Pedis were found, but the identity of the remains has yet to be released.
The Vatican insists it has done everything in its power to help solve the mystery of the missing girl.

Vatican Mystery

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AP

In Secret Service hearing, additional allegations of misconduct unearthed


By
Lucy Madison
Topics
Campaign 2012
U.S. Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan, followed by Department of Homeland Security's acting Inspector General Charles K. Edwards, arrive on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, May 23, 201, to testify before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. 
(Credit: AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
(CBS News) Amid an ongoing investigation into a prostitution scandal involving Secret Service members, new details have emerged about additional sexual misconduct allegations that have been leveled at Secret Service agents over the last five years.
In a Wednesday Senate Homeland Security hearing investigating the scandal, which rocked the agency in April after a dozen secret service officers were implicated for hiring prostitutes in Colombia, Senator Joe Lieberman, the chair of the committee, noted 64 additional allegations of misconduct over the last five years - including one complaint of non-consensual sex.
Lieberman said that most of the complaints "involved sending sexually explicit emails or sexually explicit material on a government computer," but that three of the complaints involved charges of a relationship with a foreign national, "and one was a complaint of non-consensual sexual intercourse."
Mark Sullivan, the head of the Secret Service, testified that the allegation of non-consensual sex had been thoroughly investigated by law enforcement, which ultimately decided not to go forward with charges. The other three incidents, he said, involved contact with foreign nationals and that all of the incidents "were investigated and the appropriate administrative action was taken on all three." According to Sullivan, none of those three incidents involved prostitution.
Sullivan also discussed an incident in which an agent was "separated from the agency" after soliciting an undercover police officer posing as a prostitute in 2008.
In his opening remarks, Sullivan apologized for the Colombia incident and emphasized that what happened in Cartagena last month "is not representative of [the agency's] values or of the high ethical standards we demand from our nearly 7,000 employees."
"I am deeply disappointed and I apologize for the misconduct of these employees and the distraction it has caused," he said.
Of primary concern among the committee members was the question of whether or not there may have been a "culture" within the Secret Service that tolerated the sort of behavior in which members engaged last month -- particularly after the Washington Post reported Wednesday that several implicated agents charged that was the case.
"It is hard for many people, including me, to believe that on one night in April 2012 in Cartagena, Colombia, 11 secret service agents - there to protect the president - suddenly and spontaneously did something they or other agents had never done before," Lieberman said in his testimony.
Republican Sen. Susan Collins, of Maine, also seemed skeptical that the incident in Colombia was a unique case.
"The facts so far lead me to conclude that, while not at all representative of the majority of Secret Service personnel, this misconduct was almost certainly not an isolated incident," she said in her opening statement. "The numbers [of agents] involved, as well as the participation of two senior supervisors, lead me to believe that this was not a one-time event. Rather, and it suggests an issue of culture."
Collins later pointed to the fact that the involved agents had engaged in similar behaviors independently of each other, as well as the fact that they disguised neither their own nor the prostitutes' identities when signing into the hotel, as evidence that similar conduct may have been tolerated by the Secret Service in the past.
"Two of the participants were supervisors -- one with 22 years of service and the other with 21 -- and both were married. That surely sends a message to the rank and file that this kind of activity is tolerated on the road," she said.
Throughout his testimony, Sullivan disputed that characterization and reiterated his belief that the incident in Colombia was not reflective of the agency as a whole.
"I do not think this is indicative," he said. "I just think that between the alcohol and, I don't know, the environment, these individuals did some really dumb things. And I just can't explain why."
He also emphasized that President Obama's security was never at risk because the agents had not yet been briefed on relevant security-related details.
"At the time the misconduct occurred, none of the individuals involved in the misconduct had received any specific protective information, sensitive security documents, firearms, radios or other security-related equipment in their hotel rooms," he said.
Lieberman reported that the investigation had revealed "troubling" incidents but said that so far it had failed to show "a pattern of misconduct" within the agency at large. He called on whistle blowers to come forward with any additional reports of untoward behavior.
"Our initial review of our Secret Service Agency's disciplinary records for the last five years ... show some individual cases of misconduct that are troubling but are not evidence yet of a pattern of misconduct," Lieberman said. "These records do reveal 64 instances, again over 5 years in which allegations or complaints concerning sexual misconduct were made against employees of the Secret Service."
According to acting Inspector General Charles Edwards, who is conducting a three-part independent review of the Secret Service investigation, conclusions from the first phase of the review will be made public in July.

Senators grill Secret Service boss on prostitution scandal


Secret Service chief Mark Sullivan was grilled Wednesday by the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee about the alleged hiring of Colombian prostitutes by Secret Service agents and whether the April incident was part of a larger problem at the agency.
The alleged hiring of prostitutes suggests a cultural problem within the Secret Service, Sen. Susan Collins said Wednesday amid reports of new evidence of law enforcement misconduct during the president's trip to Colombia.
"This was not a one-time event," Collins, the senior Republican on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said during the first Senate hearing on the matter. "The circumstances unfortunately suggest an issue of culture."
"If only one or two individuals out of the 160 male Secret Service personnel assigned to this mission had engaged in this type of serious misconduct, then I'd think this was an aberration," the Maine senator said. "But that's not the case; there were 12 individuals involved . . . 12. That's 8 percent of the male Secret Service personnel in-country, and 9 percent of those staying at the El Caribe Hotel."
Service Service chief Mark Sullivan, who was called to testify at the inquiry,apologized "for the conduct of these employees and the distraction it has caused." But Sullivan's assertion that the agency has a "zero tolerance" policy on such conduct did not convince the lawmakers, who brought more allegations to light.
"We can only know what the records of the Secret Service reveal," said Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, who is leading the hearing. The records, however incomplete, show 64 instances of allegations or complaints of sexual misconduct made against Secret Service employees in the last five years, he said.
Lieberman cited three complaints of inappropriate relationships with a foreign national and one of "non-consensual intercourse," which he did not elaborate on. Sullivan said that complaint was investigated by outside law enforcement officers who decided not to prosecute.

A Columbian escort spoke publicly on the radio this week claiming to be the one at the center of the Secret Service prostitution scandal and revealing her version of events. NBC's Mark Potter reports.

Sullivan also told the committee an agent was fired in a 2008 Washington prostitution episode, after trying to hire an uncover police officer.
Wednesday's hearing was expected to expose new details in the scandal, which became public after a dispute over payment between a Secret Service agent and a prostitute at a Cartagena hotel on April 12. The Secret Service was in the coastal resort for a Latin American summit before Obama's arrival. Collins said several small groups of agency employees from two hotels went out separately to clubs, bars and brothels and they "all ended up in similar circumstances."
Sullivan was expected to face criticism from senators over his contention that the alleged hiring of prostitutes by agents during the president's trip was an aberration.
Sullivan's prepared opening testimony made only one oblique reference to the new allegations involving two DEA agents and a Secret Service agent who -- during a separate nightclub visit during the president's trip -- hired women to give them massages, according to sources who have been briefed on the episode,  NBC News' Michael Isikoff reported.
Sullivan calls this "unrelated" to the allegations involving Secret Service agents who brought prostitutes back to their hotel rooms at the El Caribe Hotel.
In his prepared testimony, Sullivan said he found no evidence to substantiate a report of similar conduct during a presidential trip to El Salvador, but that the agency has imposed strict new rules for its agents, incuding a prohibition on visits to "disreputable" establishments and a ban on bringing any foreign nationals to their hotel rooms.
But lawmakers plan to grill Sullivan closely on whether the alleged misconduct reflected broader "cultural" problems within the agency.
NBC News national investigative correspondent Michael Isikoff and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Monday, May 7, 2012

SECRET SERVICE HOOKER


We DID Have Sex ...
And He Ripped Me Off!!!
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The Colombian prostitute behind the massive Secret Service scandal is finally admitting she had sex with one of the agents -- claiming he seriously short-changed her for her services, paying only $50 ... when she explicitly asked for $800.

24-year-old Dania Londono Suarez appeared on "Today" this morning with a translator -- claiming the agent was very direct about asking for sex when they met at a Cartagena bar last month.

Dania says she told him up front ... a night with her would cost $800 -- but the next morning, after they had had sex, the agent grew "very angry" when she asked for her money.

According to Dania, he threw her $50 and kicked her out -- and that's when police got involved.

The agent in question has reportedly resigned.

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