In a new embarrassment for the US
Secret Service, three agents were sent home from Amsterdam for drunkenness,
after one was found passed out in a hotel hallway.
The agents were in The Netherlands ahead of US
President Barack Obama's trip there this week as part of the elite unit tasked
with protecting the president in the event of an attack.
Secret Service spokesman Brian Leary confirmed to
AFP Wednesday "three employees were sent home for disciplinary
reasons," without giving any further details.
The story was first reported in the Washington
Post newspaper, which said the agents have been placed on administrative leave,
citing three unnamed people familiar with the case.
The incident comes two years after a scandal
involving Secret Service agents and prostitutes in the Colombian Caribbean
resort of Cartagena.
Then, a dozen agents and officers drank heavily
and brought prostitutes to their hotel before the president's arrival for an
economic summit.
Their activities came to light when one of the
call girls had an argument in a hotel hallway after an agent refused to pay
her. Colombia reported the incident to the US embassy in Bogota.
In the new case, the alleged behavior would
violate Secret Service rules adopted after the Cartagena scandal, the Post
reported.
Barack Obama's visit to the Netherlands started
with a brief stop at the Rijksmuseum, a fine-arts museum in Amsterdam, before
he attended a nuclear security summit in The Hague and met fellow G7 leaders
for talks on the Ukraine crisis.
Obama flew to Brussels on Tuesday for his first
ever visit to the European Union's headquarters, and he is also due to visit
Rome and The Vatican before heading to Saudi Arabia.
The Post said the three people sent home were
members of the Secret Service's Counter Assault Team.
That unit goes into action if the president or
his motorcade comes under attack -- they aim to fight off any attackers and
draw fire while the president's protective detail removes him from the area.
The Post said hotel staff alerted the US embassy
in the Netherlands after finding the unconscious agent Sunday morning, the day
before Obama arrived in the country.
The embassy then alerted Secret Service managers
on the presidential trip, which included the agency's director, Julia Pierson.
Under the new post-Colombia rules, staff on an
official trip are banned from drinking alcohol in the 10 hours leading up to an
assignment.
CAT members would have been called to duty
sometime Sunday for a classified briefing ahead of the president's arrival on
Monday so drinking late into the night Saturday evening and Sunday morning
would have violated that rule.
Two former agency employees with experience on
foreign assignments described the counter-assault team as one of the most elite
units in the agency, responsible for the president's life.
CAT staff are required to be highly skilled
shooters and extremely physically fit, with a demanding training regimen, the
ex-employees told the Post.
Obama described the agents' behavior in the
Colombia scandal as unacceptable.
Ten agents were removed from their jobs. Several
investigations were launched, and the new rules were designed to prevent a
repeat of such activity.
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