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The female Secret Service officer responsible for disciplining 11 agents caught in a fight with Colombian prostitutes has been revealed as one of the agency's rising stars.
Paula Reid, 46, recently became the Secret Service's South American chief after 21 years on the force.

Her crucial role in uncovering the scandal came to light as a senior congressman predicted that nearly all the agents implicated in the embarrassing incident would have to leave their jobs.

                   Taking charge: Paula Reid, chief of the Secret Service Miami office, investigated the prostitution scandal
   
Flaunt: In these Facebook images Dania Suarez, one of the Colombian  prostitutes at the centre of the Secret   Service sex scandal, flirts with the camera


Ms Reid was in Cartagena, laying the ground for Barack Obama's arrival at a major summit, when she heard that her agents had been involved in a fight at their hotel, according to the Washington Post.

The disagreement, which ended when police were called, was apparently sparked by one agent refusing to pay a local prostitute who had spent the night with him.

Ms Reid immediately launched an investigation, inspected agents' hotel records and ordered 11 men - six of whom have since left the force - to return home and face suspension.

And it was she who alerted senior management to the alleged misbehaviour, which would go on to humiliate the Secret Service and overshadow the President's trip to the Summit of the Americas.

The official's no-nonsense methods have apparently drawn the approval of Mark Sullivan, director of the Secret Service, though some have said that she could have been less forthright in her approach.
                    Flirtatious: Bikini-clad working girl Dania Suarez is at the centre of the Secret Service prostitution scandal


                        Proposal: Dania Suarez said she and one of the agents agreed he would pay her $800 for sex at the hotel


Ms Reid, who is head of the agency's Miami office, told the Post: 'Despite this current challenge facing the Secret Service, my job is to keep Miami personnel focused on our core protective and investigative missions.'

She grew up in Maryland, and has served in the White House as well as Miami since joining the Secret Service in 1990.

A decade ago, she joined a controversial class-action lawsuit alleging that African-Americans like her were discriminated against by the agency and given less prominent jobs.

In an interview several years ago, she stood up for the ability of women to serve as bodyguards, saying: 'Women would not be remotely considered if we couldn’t do it physically - and we can.'

On Saturday, the chair of the committee which oversees the Secret Service said he thought most of the agents accused of misconduct would eventually leave the force.

Six have resigned or been sacked so far, and Republican congressman Peter King said: 'I would think you'll see most of the 11 either resign, retire or will be forced to leave.

'I doubt, no matter what happens, you're going to see any of these 11 ever involved in any kind of detail like this again. They basically have to stay out of the public eye, if they stay on the job.'

He added: 'Among those 11, besides what they did, they also are in trouble, if you will, for what they didn't do. And what they didn't do is report it.'
 
Scandal: David Randall Chaney, right, was forced to retire over his alleged role in the incident. The 48-year-old claimed he was 'really checking out' Sarah Palin, left, when he guarded her during the 2008 election campaign


It was earlier reported that some of the prostitutes involved in the scandal may have been underage.

A Colombian government official told a newspaper group that investigators from the Colombian attorney general’s office have questioned employees of the hotel in question, and the taxi driver who drove home the woman who triggered the scandal, to find out more.

The U.S. agents and military personnel involved could face criminal charges if it is proven that they had sex with girls under the age of 18.

When Darrell Issa, the Republican chairman of the House Government Oversight and Reform Committee, was asked if any of the men had done so, he said neither he nor Mr Sullivan could be certain.

‘In the case of the 11 agents, the primary determination is you can’t determine to charge or not charge somebody until you know whether a crime is committed,’ he said, according to The Daily Beast.

‘Under U.S. law, if any of these women are under 18—I can tell you we do not know and Director Sullivan does not have actual contact/picture matched up to verify that as far as I know. When he does, I would expect a call, because that would be a relief to many of us to not have on top of everything else.’

Issa stressed that it was a crime to sleep with minors abroad - although there is no suggestion that any of the men who have been named did.

‘U.S. laws passed in 2003 and 2006 were designed to prevent sex vacations causing harm to underage women,’ the Republican Representative added. ‘We have to respect some things, but going internationally anywhere to have sex acts underage is prohibited under U.S. law.’
                    Working girl: The single mother said she met the agent at a discotheque, and agreed to a price of $800


The news came as a senior Republican, Senator Charles Grassley, urged the investigation to extend to presidential staff who were preparing for Barack Obama's visit.

Also on Friday, Mr Obama received a personal briefing on the state of the investigation from Mark Sullivan, director of the Secret Service.

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Mr Grassley urged investigators to check hotel records for White House advance staff and communications personnel who were in Cartagena for the Summit of the Americas.

In a letter to Mr Sullivan and the inspector general at the Homeland Security Department, Mr Grassley asked whether hotel records for the White House staffers had been checked.
He wrote: 'Have records for overnight guests for those entities been pulled as part of the investigation? If not, why not?'

Additionally Mr Grassley, top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, asked whether rooms were shared by Secret Service, the communications agency and the presidential advance staff.

After three agents resigned on Friday, the number of men forced out by the scandal rose to six.

Five more are suspended during the investigation, while one man has been cleared of serious misconduct but could still face disciplinary action.

Mr Sullivan visited the White House late on Friday to brief Mr Obama in the Oval Office.

Meanwhile, the lawyer of the two ousted Secret Service supervisors David Chaney and Greg Stokes said that President Barack Obama's safety was never at risk and criticized leaks of internal government investigations in the case, signaling their strategy for an upcoming legal defense.
        Seedy: The PleyClub, in Cartagena, Colombia, where Obama's Secret Service agents allegedly picked up prostitutes
                                                       Provocative: The PleyClub website promises to turn your fantasies into reality


Lawrence Berger said he could not comment on the woman's claims about being paid for sex, but added: 'I don't think anything she has said is material to any of the issues I am pressing with my clients.

'Nothing that has been reported in the press in any way negatively or adversely impacted the mission of that agency or the safety of the president of the United States.'

The scandal came to light when a 24-year-old high-end escort fought with an agent who slept with her at a Colombian hotel but then refused to hand over the $800 they had agreed upon.

Her name has been revealed as Dania Suarez and she has gone into hiding after photographs of her emerged.

Her identity was revealed as the names of two of the Secret Service supervisors involved in the scandal came to light.

David Chaney was forced to retire over his alleged role in the incident, while Greg Stokes was 'removed with cause'.

Another agent resigned after being suspended as part of the investigation into the scandal.

One of the three agents to have left the service so far apparently plans to sue the agency over his treatment in the aftermath of the prostitution scandal, which has made headlines around the world.

Stokes, who could appeal his sacking in the next 30 days, is apparently head of the agency's Canine Training Section.

The men were identified soon after Suarez, the mother of a 9-year-old son, broke her silence.

Speaking about the tawdry episode that has seen three agents ousted from their posts after a wild night of partying in Cartagena last week, the escort claims she was offered $30 - a fraction of her $800 fee - for a night with one of the men.

'I tell him, "Baby, my cash money",' she recalled in an interview with The New York Times, recounting the heated exchange that has wrecked the agency's reputation and become an election year embarrassment for President Barack Obama.

The news came as the Secret Service said three employees have been ousted in the wake of questionable behaviour at the Hotel Caribe last week, with some now under investigation for possible drug use, ABC News reports.

New details of the sordid night emerged on Wednesday as the single mother and self-described prostitute told The New York Times that she met an agent at a discotheque, believed to be the PleyClub, in Cartagena and after a night of drinking.

'They never told me they were with Obama,' she said, calling the men 'very discreet'.

The woman, who chose to remain anonymous, said she and one of the agents agreed the agent would pay her $800 for sex at the hotel.

The next morning, when the hotel's front desk called because the woman hadn't left, the pair argued over the price.

In an interview in Colombia, Suarez said the two argued after the agent initially offered to pay her about $30 and the situation escalated, eventually ending with Colombian law enforcement involved. She said she was eventually paid about $225.

Days later, she said a friend told her the argument had made the news, and to her shock, she discovered the man was a Secret Service agent.

'I'm scared,' she said, adding that she did not want the man in question to be reprimanded, and fears retaliation, the Times reports.

'This is something really big,' she added. 'This is the government of the United States. I have nervous attacks. I cry all the time'

Eleven Secret Service agents were eventually sent home from the colonial-era city of Cartagena on Colombia's Caribbean coast after a wild night of partying that saw many of the agents bring escorts back to their rooms, according to reports.

HOW OBAMA'S BODYGUARDS UPSTAGED HIS TRIP TO COLOMBIA

News that 11 Secret Service agents had been sent home after 'nearly all of them' were caught with prostitutes all but overshadowed President Barack Obama's trip to Colombia this weekend.

The scandal unfolded rapidly after a tipster called the Associated Press and reported the incident Wednesday night at the luxurious Hotel Caribe in Cartagena, where the agents were staying while the conducted advance security operations to prepare for the president's arrival.

The agents allegedly picked up the hookers at the seedy PleyClub after a night of heavy drinking and hard-partying there.

They were busted after a prostitute got angry and caused a commotion involving hotel security and local police when one agent refused to pay her. The tab? $47.

Two of the men were supervisors. Several are married and all of them have been suspended, pending an investigation.

Experts say the scandal could have exposed the agents to blackmail and potentially endangered the president.

President Obama, whom the Secret Service claims was never in danger, said he would be 'angry' if the allegations are proven true.

Rep Darrell Issa, a California Republican, suggested Secret Service agents might be covering up other sex scandals when he said, 'Things like this don't happen once if they didn't happen before.'

Special agents and uniformed officers were stationed in Cartagena in advance of President Barack Obama's arrival for the Summit of the Americas. The incident occurred before Obama arrived and was at a different hotel than the president stayed in.

The agents implicated in the prostitution scandal in Colombia that also involved about 10 military service members and as many as 20 women had their security clearances revoked.

'These are the first steps,' said Representative Pete King, R-New York, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, which oversees the Secret Service. King said the agency's director, Mark Sullivan, took employment action against 'the three people he believes the case was clearest against.' But King warned: 'It's certainly not over.'

King said the agent set to be fired would sue. King said Sullivan had to follow collective bargaining rules but was 'moving as quickly as he can. Once he feels the facts are clear, he's going to move.'

In Washington and Colombia, separate U.S. government investigations were already under way. King said he has assigned four congressional investigators to the probe. The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, led by Rep. Darrell Issa, R-California, sought details of the Secret Service investigation, including the disciplinary histories of the agents involved. Secret Service investigators are in Colombia interviewing witnesses.

In a letter to Sullivan, Issa and Representative Elijah Cummings of Maryland, the committee's ranking Democrat, said the agents 'brought foreign nationals in contact with sensitive security information.' A potential security breach has been among the concerns raised by members of Congress.

The episode took a sharp political turn when presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney said he would fire the agents involved.

Romney told radio host Laura Ingraham on Wednesday that 'I'd clean house' at the Secret Service.

'The right thing to do is to remove people who have violated the public trust and have put their play time and their personal interests ahead of the interests of the nation,' Romney said.

While Romney suggested to Ingraham that a leadership problem led to the scandal, he told a Columbus, Ohio, radio station earlier that he has confidence in Sullivan, the head of the agency.

'I believe the right corrective action will be taken there and obviously everyone is very, very disappointed,' Romney said. 'I think it will be dealt with (in) as aggressive a way as is possible given the requirements of the law.'

When asked, the Romney campaign would not say whether he had been briefed on the situation or was relying upon media reports for details.

At least 10 military personnel who were staying at the same hotel are also being investigated for misconduct.

Two U.S. military officials have said they include five Army Green Berets. One of the officials said the group also includes two Navy Explosive Ordinance Disposal technicians, two Marine dog handlers and an Air Force airman. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation is still under way.

Secret Service's Office of Professional Responsibility, which handles that agency's internal affairs, is investigating, and the Homeland Security Department's inspector general also has been notified.

Sullivan, who this week has briefed lawmakers behind closed doors, said he has referred to the case to an independent government investigator.

Colonel Scott Malcom, a spokesman of U.S. Southern Command, which organized the military team assigned to support the Secret Service's mission in Cartagena, said Wednesday that an Air Force colonel is leading the military investigation and arrived in Colombia with a military lawyer Tuesday morning.

The troops are suspected of violating curfews set by their commanders.



'They were either not in their room or they showed up to their room late while all this was going on or they were in their room with somebody who shouldn't be there,' Malcom said.

Lawmakers have called for a thorough investigation and have suggested they would hold oversight hearings, though none has yet been scheduled. The incident is expected to come up next week on Wednesday when Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee for a previously scheduled oversight hearing.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said that for now, he is interested in what actually happened. He did not address how much responsibility Obama should bear for the scandal or whether Congress should hold hearings on it.

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