Monday, Jul. 12, 1982

Capitol Scandal

FBI probes sex-for-jobs claims

These are serious charges," declared Ohio Congressman Louis Stokes, chairman of the House Ethics Committee. "I am deeply disturbed," said House Speaker Tip O'Neill. "This is the last thing Congress needs," agreed Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker, who added, "I'm flabbergasted."

The source of their consternation was an FBI investigation into charges that perhaps three Congressmen may have had homosexual relations with teen-age boys who serve as pages on Capitol Hill. An unspecified number of the pages, who run errands for members of Congress, supposedly felt they would lose their jobs if they did not agree to have sex with the Congressmen involved. Claims that female pages were solicited were also being probed. There were vague allegations in a separate investigation by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration that some Congressmen used cocaine supplied by pages.

So far, the sex scandal rests on shaky ground. One 16-year-old page told CBS News that he had once been propositioned by a Congressman and that pages had told him that they had been invited to parties at which Congressmen asked for sex in return for continued employment. CBS put the frightened page on its Evening News program, using silhouetted settings to obscure his features. An 18-year-old former page, who has been accused of car theft and writing bad checks, told CBS he had had sex with three Congressmen.

With rumors swirling on Capitol Hill about the identity of the Congressmen under investigation, O'Neill and Stokes announced that the House Ethics Committee would conduct its own probe. If ever an investigation needed a quick and fair resolution, it is this one. The public already holds Congress in relatively low esteem, and generalized accusations of sexual misconduct can only make matters worse. Said Baker: "I never thought I'd see the day when I'd rather talk about abortion and gun control."

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