Investigators from the Colombian attorney general’s office have talked with employees of the hotel where the Secret Service agents were staying and have also questioned the taxi driver who drove home the woman whose complaint about not being adequately paid triggered the scandal, the official said.
As more Secret Service officers resigned Friday in the expanding prostitution scandal, Colombian authorities have opened a preliminary inquiry out of concern that underage ladies might have been involved.
The Colombian probe in to the ages of the ladies for the first time raises the likelihood that a quantity of the 21 Americans tied to the scandal – 11 Secret Service agents and ten members of the U.S. military – could face criminal charges in Colombia, and not ethics complaints within their agencies in the United States.
The official was not authorized to speak about the inquiry and asked not to be indentified by name. Police also went to at least of the adult entertainment clubs linked to the scandal to confirm the ages of the ladies who worked there, a club worker said.
While sex for pay is legal between adults in Colombia, inducing a minor to engage in prostitution is illegal, the official said. As plenty of as 21 ladies may have provided sexual services to the visiting Americans.
Members of the Secret Service who have been forced out include supervisors.
The scandal also involves at least 11 military members who were working on security before Obama arrived in Cartagena for the Summit of the Americas. The Pentagon acknowledged Friday that the 11th military person, a member of the Army, was implicated.
An additional Secret Service worker was implicated Friday, a government official said, commenting only on condition of anonymity concerning the continuing inquiry. That brings the number to 12. has been cleared of serious misconduct, but still faces administrative action, an official said.
Also late Friday, Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa urged a broader inquiry, including checking hotel records for White House advance staff & communications personnel who were in Cartagena for the summit. In a letter to Sullivan & the inspector general at the Homeland Security Department, Grassley asked whether hotel records for the White House staffers had been pulled as part of the investigations.
The men were in Cartagena as an advance team preparing for President Barack Obama’s attendance at a summit of Western Hemisphere leaders last week. Neither the club worker nor the attorney general office would comment on the record about the inquiry or the police operation at the Pleyclub, of the late-night clubs linked to the scandal.
“Prostitution that involves adults is not a crime in Colombia, but inducing minors to engage in prostitution is a crime & this is the reason why the government is trying to confirm whether underage ladies participated in this,” the official said.
So far, they added, officials have not found any facts of any minors involved in the incident. of the ways investigators have verified the women’s ages was by examining information the hotel gathered from their identification cards, which ladies staying overnight at the hotel are necessary to leave at the reception table. Hotel executives & workers have refused to discuss the case.















