February 11, 2009 5:51 PM

House Panel Probes Foley Page Scandal

(CBS/AP)  A Louisiana congressman and sponsor of a page who later received questionable e-mails from ex-Rep. Mark Foley went before a House ethics panel Wednesday to explain how his office handled the teen's complaint last fall.

GOP Rep. Rodney Alexander appeared Wednesday morning and says that after he and his staff learned of the e-mails to the former page, his aides contacted the office of House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., for advice on what to do about communications the boy's family thought were inappropriate.

"We told 'em what we know, when we knew it, and what we did about it. And we are looking forward and hoping that the committee will talk to others," Alexander told reporters after testifying. "It's quite apparent from some of the reports out there that there are many people that know what we know and have known it for a lot longer period of time than we've known."

Alexander said he thought the investigation was going well and reiterated his concern for the page's family, reports CBS News' Allison Davis.

"He's been exposed to a lot of trauma. His parents have been almost physically sick about the attention that he's gotten unfairly," Alexander said of the page.

Alexander's account — that the matter was passed on to more senior House members and top staff — has not been challenged. His testimony is a small piece of a more confusing puzzle that puts Hastert and his aides at odds with the accounts of other top GOP lawmakers and their aides.

Two of those figures, Majority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, and former House Clerk Jeff Trandahl, are scheduled to testify Thursday.

Boehner has said he discussed the Foley situation with Hastert last spring after Alexander informed him of the e-mails, as has Rep. Tom Reynolds, R-N.Y. Foley abruptly resigned from Congress last month after he was confronted with the contents of his messages to former pages.

Republicans are bracing for testimony by Trandahl — a top House aide who was the day-to-day overseer of the page program until leaving Capitol Hill last year. Trandahl confronted Foley about too-friendly e-mails sent to the ex-page.

Trandahl also handled other alleged incidents regarding Foley, including a 2001 or 2002 episode in which the Florida congressman sent e-mails described as "creepy" to a former page sponsored by Rep. Jim Kolbe, R-Ariz. Kolbe's office went to Trandahl and the e-mails stopped.

Trandahl also is in position to support testimony by Kirk Fordham, a former top aide to Foley, who has told the panel he informed top House GOP aides of Foley's inappropriate behavior toward pages years ago. Fordham has testified about an episode several years ago in which a drunk Foley is said to have tried to enter the page dorm.

Those top House GOP aides include Scott Palmer, Hastert's longtime top aide and confidant, who denies Fordham's account and who is not mentioned in an account by the speaker's office regarding the 2005 incident with the Louisiana page.

Hastert aide Palmer has yet to testify; neither has the speaker.

Foley's most recent chief of staff, Elizabeth Nicholson, appeared for questioning by the ethics panel Wednesday afternoon. She has told former associates that she was unaware of Foley's inappropriate contacts with ex-pages.

"She just honestly had no clue," said a former co-worker.

On Tuesday, House Sergeant-at-Arms Wilson Livingood, a member of the Page Board, which oversees the program for high school students who basically function as congressional interns, was questioned for less than two hours. He would not comment afterward.

The ethics panel also heard Tuesday from Paula Nowakowski, chief of staff to Boehner. Boehner has said Hastert told him the Louisiana page's complaint "had been taken care of."

Separately this week, Page Board members discussed a camping trip Kolbe took with two former pages and others to the Grand Canyon in 1996, a congressional official said Tuesday. The trip is under review by the Justice Department.

The three lawmakers and two House officials who make up the board took no action and did not have any information beyond recent news accounts of the trip, the official said.

Kolbe, the only openly gay Republican in Congress, is retiring at the end of his term. He has denied through an aide that anything inappropriate occurred during the trip.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by bluestardad October 20, 2006 5:47 PM EDT
Put on your Knee pads America the Republicans are going to Probe us again.
Reply to this comment
by bluestardad October 19, 2006 2:10 PM EDT
Remember to Vote Republican and get a free gift, Mr. Foley%u2019s %u201CSoap on a Rope%u201D guaranteed to help you achieve Mission Accomplished, especially made for those of you who are having trouble Staying the Course.

Special Note: This product will be discretely delivered in plain brown paper wrapping complete with plausible deniability and I do not recall disclaimer instructions.
Reply to this comment
by frankly6 October 19, 2006 4:19 AM EDT
Check out the video below for a good belly laugh on this scandle.
Reply to this comment
by frankly6 October 19, 2006 4:19 AM EDT
http://youtube.com/watch?v=myef63LgltU&mode=related&search=
Reply to this comment
by bellal-2009 October 18, 2006 10:24 PM EDT
Honest to god, I think if we just filled congress with a cross section of citizens like a jury we'd be better off. What a bunch of losers, both sides of the aisle. This is the sloppiest election season I can remember.
Reply to this comment
by frankly6 October 18, 2006 8:20 PM EDT
Hey lets start a list of Republican greatest hits.
I'll start with something relevant to this topic:

1. We're the family values party.

2. We believe in personal responsiblity.

3. It's Clinton's fault.

4. I don't recall being told that.

5. I'm an alcoholic and it's been clouding my judgement. I'm checking in to treatment now.

6. What is the age of sexual consent again?

7. Remember 9/11 9/11 9/11.

8. Be afraid. Be very afraid. Mushroom cloud. 9/11 9/11 9/11

9. It's Clinton's fault. What was the question again?

10. Stay the course.

11. Don't kut-n-run!

12. Liberal media!

13. Freedom's on the march.

14. Mission acomplished.

Reply to this comment
by frankly6 October 18, 2006 7:46 PM EDT
It's time for a change. These people have seriously lost their way. Vote for change.
Reply to this comment
by mjv2944 October 18, 2006 6:38 PM EDT
Vote them all out in Nov.
Reply to this comment
by observantx October 18, 2006 6:34 PM EDT
His testimony is a small piece of a more confusing puzzle that puts Hastert and his aides at odds with the accounts of other top GOP lawmakers and their aides.

There is NO confusing puzzle. Hastert was told about Foley's behavior and he swept it under the rug to keep his party in the majority. The safety of the pages was the last thing on his mind. The first thing on his mind was his position, his power, his perks, and his money.
Reply to this comment
by bluestardad October 18, 2006 6:21 PM EDT
These Congressional leaders have lost the trust of America. They are just waiting until the election so they can leave quietly.
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