WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. House of Representatives Ethics
Committee started an investigation on Thursday into a sex scandal involving a
Republican congressman who resigned last week.
The committee approved about four dozen subpoenas for witnesses and
documents for the investigation, which was launched over an unfolding scandal
over sexually suggestive messages sent by former Republican lawmaker Mark Foley
to young, male congressional pages.
Foley, 52, resigned last Friday after disclosure he sent sexually explicit
e-mails.
Earlier this week, the Justice Department ordered House officials to
preserve all records related to Foley's electronic correspondence with
teenagers.
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, who had been criticized for his handling of
early warnings about the Foley's behavior, said he would cooperate but refused
to resign.
"The bottom line is I am taking responsibility for it because ultimately
the buck stops here," Hastert said at a news conference in his district of
Batavia, Illinois.
"I'm sorry that this happened. We are now trying to correct the problem,"
he said.
At the White House, spokesman White Snow said President George W. Bush and
Vice President Dick Cheney supported Hastert and did not want him to resign.
In the Congress's page program, young people work for lawmakers in exchange
for insights into the U.S. political system and are referred to as "pages."
Enditem
Sexual e-mails: U.S congressman resigns
BEIJING, Sept. 30 (Xinhuanet) -- The Republican author of key sexual predator provisions of a child protection and safety act resigned from the U.S. Congress Friday after reports he sent sexually inappropriate e-mails to underage congressional interns. >>>