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Secret Service Sex Scandal: Prostitution Is Big Business In Colombia


Flashermac

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--> he's still out the whopping $47 dollars.

 

 

 

Truth is he could have rode her all night with bizarre and painful "special requests" for that $47. At least he had the decency to cover it himself rather than put that on the taxpayer.

 

Doubt many will lose pensions or other vested benefits for this.

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--> he's still out the whopping $47 dollars.

 

 

 

Truth is he could have rode her all night with bizarre and painful "special requests" for that $47. At least he had the decency to cover it himself rather than put that on the taxpayer.

 

Doubt many will lose pensions or other vested benefits for this.

 

 

Sex tourist can not get a passport.

 

Were the passports of these agents taken away from them?

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--> he's still out the whopping $47 dollars.

 

Truth is he could have rode her all night with bizarre and painful "special requests" for that $47. At least he had the decency to cover it himself rather than put that on the taxpayer.

 

Doubt many will lose pensions or other vested benefits for this.

 

That's a real cheap Charly. 47$ are now killing the careers of at least 11 secret service agents...

 

Anyway, how could the US secret service have become so sloppy in regard to prostitutes?

 

I mean, using prostitutes for honey traps is one of the eldest methods in the spy business. Agents who are responsible for the security of the president of the United States should really stay away from prostitutes when there are working to secure the President - especially in the country with the largest cocaine production in the world, controlled by four major drug cartels, while the USA is actively involved in the drug war against these cartels. Than add Cuba, Venezuela or China to the list of those countries which have great interested to blackmail agents working close to the US president....

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PS: Maybe I am wrong:

 

One former secret service agent, Dan Emmett, has dismissed charges that the agents's behaviour posed a risk of them being blackmailed in the future, as "novel espionage stuff".Emmett, who served under four presidents, said: "The secret service is not an intelligence organisation; it's law enforcement."

 

He told ABC News that the men were not part of the agency's presidential protective division, which is closest to the president.

 

"Moreover, even though the president was going to be staying in the same hotel, the part he would have been in was nowhere close to where these people were or would have been," Emmett said. "With the layers of security surrounding Obama, it would not be possible for him or any unauthorised person to get anywhere close.

 

"So blackmail is not an issue. I would totally discount that as being someone's overactive imagination."

 

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/apr/16/pentagon-troops-secret-service-scandal

 

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