Rep. Kolbe saw Foley messages in 2000

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Apr 9, 2006
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It just keeps growing.

Another lawmaker knew of inappropriate Internet exchanges

Another Republican congressman knew of disgraced former representative Mark Foley's inappropriate Internet exchanges as far back as 2000 and personally confronted Foley about his communications.

A spokeswoman for Rep. Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz.) confirmed yesterday that a former page showed the congressman Internet messages that had made the youth feel uncomfortable with the direction Foley (R-Fla.) was taking their e-mail relationship. Last week, when the Foley matter erupted, a Kolbe staff member suggested to the former page that he take the matter to the clerk of the House, Karen Haas, said Kolbe's press secretary, Korenna Cline.

The revelation pushes back by at least five years the date when a member of Congress has acknowledged learning of Foley's questionable behavior. A timeline issued by House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) suggested that the first lawmakers to know, Rep. John M. Shimkus (R-Ill.), the chairman of the House Page Board, and Rep. Rodney Alexander (R-La.), became aware of "over-friendly" e-mails only last fall. It also expands the universe of players in the drama beyond members, either in leadership or on the page board.

A source with direct knowledge of Kolbe's involvement said the messages shared with Kolbe were sexually explicit, and he read the contents to The Washington Post under condition that they are not reprinted. But Cline denied the source's characterization, saying only that the messages had made the former page feel uncomfortable. Nevertheless, she said, "corrective action" was taken. Cline said she still has not yet determined whether that action went beyond Kolbe's confrontation with Foley.

In interviews with The Post last week, multiple pages identified Kolbe as a close friend and personal confidante, who was one of the only members of Congress to take any interest in them. A former page himself, Kolbe offered to mentor pages and kept in touch with some of them after they left the program, according to the interviews.

Kolbe once invited four former pages to make use of his Washington home while he was out of town, according to an instant message between Foley and another former page, Jordan Edmund, in January 2002. The pages planned to attend a first-year reunion of their page class. But they never took Kolbe up on his offer because of a snow storm, according to one of the four pages.

Cline said one of the youths invited was a former page of Kolbe's. Because the congressman frequently travels on weekends, either to his Arizona ranch or abroad, the house is often available to friends, constituents, staff and former staff members, such as a former page, she said.

Kolbe, the only openly gay Republican in Congress, is retiring at the end of the year.

Crucial midterm elections
The latest revelation in the growing House page scandal comes just a month before crucial midterm elections. Foley resigned Sept. 29 after ABC News confronted him with the sexually explicit messages that he exchanged with a former page, triggering investigations by the Justice Department, the House ethics committee and Florida authorities.

Hastert and his top aides have been sharply criticized by Democrats and some conservative Republicans for failing to act promptly after receiving warnings that Foley had been sexually predatory in dealing with pages and former pages. Ron Bonjean, the speaker's spokesman, said yesterday: "Allegations of inappropriate conduct by members of Congress towards pages need to be fully reviewed by the ethics committee and law enforcement."

In addressing the revelation about Kolbe, Bonjean said, "This allegation reiterates why the speaker has also called for a full review of the House page program to ensure that it is as safe and secure as possible."

A new poll by Newsweek indicated the Foley scandal was doing significant damage to the Republicans' political fortunes and could sink their chances of holding onto control of Congress on Election Day, Nov. 7. The poll found that 52 percent of Americans, including 29 percent of Republicans, believe Hastert was aware of Foley's Internet communications with underage pages and tried to cover up Foley's actions. More of those polled, 42 percent, now say they trust Democrats to do a better job handling moral values than Republicans; 36 percent favored Republicans on the values question.

Sharp exchange
In a sharp exchange on "Fox News Sunday," Rep. Jack Kingston (R-Ga.), the vice chairman of the House Republican Conference, insinuated that Democrats were behind the revelations of Foley's actions and the release of e-mails and instant messages showing Foley having sexually graphic or highly suggestive conversations with former pages.

"What I don't understand is where have these e-mails been for three years? Are we saying that a 15-year-old child would have sat on e-mails that were triple-X-rated for three years and suddenly spring them out right on the eve of an election? That's just a little bit too suspicious, even for Washington, D.C.," Kingston said.

Rep. Martin T. Meehan (D-Mass.) shot back, "If there's any evidence that you need that the values in Washington have turned upside down, you could just hear what Jack had to say. Only in Washington, D.C., can you take a group of people in charge of the House and basically have evidence that they've been looking the other way while a predator has been . . . going after 15- and 16-year-old pages, [and] they somehow . . . have the audacity to turn that into a political attack against Democrats."

So far, only ABC News and The Washington Post have actually obtained the sexually explicit instant messages between two former pages and Foley. The Post obtained its copies from a former page who served on Capitol Hill with the other two pages.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15188206/
 
Oh goody...North Korea just tested a Nuclear bomb...

Iran is threatening to make one..

But the Foley thing is still the most important thing in the minds of a liberal.:rolleyes:

Foley resigned and left the office in disgrace, as he should of within hours of this breaking, for sending EMAILS AND IMs........
Now the big breaking new today....................An Ex Page had sex with Foley when he was 21.........

Foley didn't stay and turn his back on the Congress when he was being censured for having SEX with a 17yr old page.....
Foley didn't go and lie under oath and was impeached, and still stayed in office for having sex with his 21 intern......

The Foley thing, same as the Clinton thing, same as the Studds thing....

Still wouldn't make me go out and vote for a Democrat........

And you can bet your bottom dollar I will go out and vote for the Republicans, just for this reason.. I wouldn't care if it's 65 below zero here.....:boobies:

They think a sexual email and Im scandal is more important than what the f$$$ks going on around the world with foreign policy.

Sheeeeeesh...
 
Did i miss something? I thought the news had been stating that Foley had made this instant messages within the last 3 or 4 years. How on earth could this Representative have known about it prior to when he did it? When did these instant messages occur? I am curious now if they are claiming someone knew about it back in 2000.
 
Did i miss something? I thought the news had been stating that Foley had made this instant messages within the last 3 or 4 years. How on earth could this Representative have known about it prior to when he did it? When did these instant messages occur? I am curious now if they are claiming someone knew about it back in 2000.

This was about a different page, a different incident.

Is Foley Catholic?
 
It just keeps growing.

Another lawmaker knew of inappropriate Internet exchanges

Another Republican congressman knew of disgraced former representative Mark Foley's inappropriate Internet exchanges as far back as 2000 and personally confronted Foley about his communications.

...

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15188206/

I thought this was an interesting take:

http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=110009065

Who Knew? Kolbe Did.
"A Republican congressman knew of disgraced former representative Mark Foley's inappropriate Internet exchanges as far back as 2000 and personally confronted Foley about his communications," the Washington Post reports:

A spokeswoman for Rep. Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz.) confirmed yesterday that a former page showed the congressman Internet messages that had made the youth feel uncomfortable with the direction Foley (R-Fla.) was taking their e-mail relationship. . . .

A source with direct knowledge of Kolbe's involvement said the messages shared with Kolbe were sexually explicit, and he read the contents to The Washington Post under the condition that they not be reprinted. But [Kolbe press secretary Korenna] Cline denied the source's characterization, saying only that the messages had made the former page feel uncomfortable. Nevertheless, she said, "corrective action" was taken. Cline said she has not yet determined whether that action went beyond Kolbe's confrontation with Foley.
Kolbe is gay, the only GOP House member to have publicly acknowledged homosexuality. And the revelation got us to thinking: We hear a lot about "homophobia," or fear of homosexuality, but if Foley's fellow Republicans failed to be alarmed by his "overly friendly" emails, maybe it was because of something more like homo-obliviousness. Most people just don't think that much about homosexuality.

When we first read those emails, we found them odd and a bit creepy. But it occurs to us that if a 50-year-old man sent a 16-year-old girl an email asking her to send a picture of herself, that would have set off loud alarm bells and brightly flashing lights. We know how the mind of a heterosexual man works, being in possession of one, and when a guy asks a gal he barely knows for a picture, it means that he has a sexual or romantic interest in her.

When a guy asks another guy for a picture, what does it mean? When we stop to think about it, probably the same thing, but it wasn't obvious to us because it simply isn't part of our experience. We suspect the same was true of Hastert and other House leaders. Kolbe, on the other hand, because he is gay, probably understood better what Foley was up to and that it wasn't good.
 
I just watched Bill Oreilly tonight...He had on this Michael Rogers, who I posted on in another thread about him outing CLOSETED REPUBLICAN GAYS..

Well, he said again, that he will be releasing dirt on another three republicans who are associated with or who are CLOSETED GAYS (homosexual),soon.....
He said something about Dennis Hastert tonight, so I believe him to be one of those targeted...He also mentioned him in the thread I posted over at the lifestyles about this ugly, hateful, shove it in your face homosexual activist....

Welcome to the dirty politics of the Democratic party, mixed in with the liberal biased media....

Oh such a lovely party.....

No ideas, hey no problem....Just go out and smear someone......

Go vote Democrat.....:bow3::puke3:
 
Did i miss something? I thought the news had been stating that Foley had made this instant messages within the last 3 or 4 years. How on earth could this Representative have known about it prior to when he did it? When did these instant messages occur? I am curious now if they are claiming someone knew about it back in 2000.

When I read this I thought the same thing:
A spokeswoman for Rep. Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz.) confirmed yesterday that a former page showed the congressman Internet messages that had made the youth feel uncomfortable with the direction Foley (R-Fla.) was taking their e-mail relationship.

It is clear that the writer intended us to be mislead. It appears, however, that the "Internet messages" were not IMs, but emails. Yet another example of media bias.
 
I thought this was an interesting take:

http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=110009065

Kolbe is gay, the only GOP House member to have publicly acknowledged homosexuality. And the revelation got us to thinking: We hear a lot about "homophobia," or fear of homosexuality, but if Foley's fellow Republicans failed to be alarmed by his "overly friendly" emails, maybe it was because of something more like homo-obliviousness. Most people just don't think that much about homosexuality.

When we first read those emails, we found them odd and a bit creepy. But it occurs to us that if a 50-year-old man sent a 16-year-old girl an email asking her to send a picture of herself, that would have set off loud alarm bells and brightly flashing lights. We know how the mind of a heterosexual man works, being in possession of one, and when a guy asks a gal he barely knows for a picture, it means that he has a sexual or romantic interest in her.

When a guy asks another guy for a picture, what does it mean? When we stop to think about it, probably the same thing, but it wasn't obvious to us because it simply isn't part of our experience. We suspect the same was true of Hastert and other House leaders. Kolbe, on the other hand, because he is gay, probably understood better what Foley was up to and that it wasn't good.

Interesting, but retarded.

"When a guy asks another guy for a picture, what does it mean?"

"We know how the mind of a heterosexual man works, being in possession of one"

All Pedos think alike.
 
Hey Kat.....Could I have a picture of you.....;) ;) ;) ;)

Now, my heterosexual mind is not thinking of jumping your bones, if you would send me this.....................:eek2:
 
If Foley's horney emails are such a relentlessly critical issue, perhaps the lesson is that we shouldn't have gays in Congress. I'm just sayin. :smoke:

you mean the horny instant messages? From what ive seen the emails were not like that.
 

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