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Rep. Reynolds Testifies On Foley Scandal

The House Republican campaign chairman and the speaker of the House are likely to be at odds this week as they testify about the handling of ex-Rep. Mark Foley's come-ons to male pages.

Rep. Tom Reynolds, R-N.Y., has said he warned Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., about Foley last spring. Hastert, who is expected to be questioned sometime this week, has said he doesn't remember that conversation.

Reynolds appeared before the House ethics committee Tuesday. After approximately three hours of testimony, he left the committee room and gave a brief statement saying that he came voluntarily to "do my part," reports CBS News.

"The committee has asked us not to share the substance," said Reynolds. "A full and fair investigation is vital."

A four-member ethics investigating panel is keeping key witnesses behind closed doors for hours as it tries to unravel conflicts over when and what Hastert and his staff learned about Foley's conduct and what they did about it.

Hastert's chief of staff, Scott Palmer, spent more than six hours before the committee Monday. Palmer has disputed one account that he was warned about Foley in 2002 or 2003.

Reynolds, head of the National Republican Congressional Committee, has said he spoke with Hastert last spring after learning of Foley's overly friendly e-mails to a former Louisiana page, who was 16 at the time. Those e-mails were not sexually explicit.

The speaker has said he can't recall the Reynolds warning, and has contended he doesn't remember having a separate conversation about Foley earlier this year with Majority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio. Boehner not only recalls speaking with Hastert, but said the speaker told him the page's complaint "had been taken care of."

Boehner said after his recent testimony in the case that he didn't change the account of his actions.

Campaigning for a Republican candidate in Tennessee, Hastert said Monday he plans to testify before the committee this week.

"What Mark Foley did was wrong. It was ethically wrong. It's a shame. It's actually disgusting," Hastert told reporters after a campaign rally in Johnson City, Tenn.

In Washington, Palmer's lawyer, Scott Fredericksen, said his client hasn't changed his version of events. Former Foley chief of staff Kirk Fordham has said he warned the Hastert aide about Foley at least three years ago.

"What Kirk Fordham said did not happen," Palmer said weeks ago in his lone public statement on the matter.

Fredericksen said the testimony was "consistent with the position he's taken all along."

Palmer spent more time in the committee offices than any other witness in three weeks of testimony, entering at 1:57 p.m. and leaving at 8:18 p.m.

Foley, R-Fla., resigned his seat Sept. 29 after he was confronted with sexually explicit instant messages he sent to former pages other than the Louisiana youngster.

Hastert has a lot riding on the outcome of the ethics investigation. He has fended off calls for his resignation with statements that his staff members acted properly after they learned a year ago about Foley's friendly messages to the Louisiana page.

Hastert said his staff notified the chief clerk, who confronted Foley along with Rep. John Shimkus, R-Ill., the chairman of the House board overseeing the page program. Foley was told to stop contacting the youngster.

Hastert said he didn't learn about Foley until late this September, when the scandal became public and Foley left Congress.

The speaker has vowed to fire any of his aides if they covered up knowledge of Foley's behavior.

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