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Apr 16, 2012

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thumbnail Possible security breach: Secret Service agents had president's schedule in rooms
Apr 17th 2012, 00:41

New details about the Secret Service personnel alleged to have brought prostitutes to their hotel rooms have emerged, including reports that two of the 11 were supervisors. NBC's Kristen Welker reports.

By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

The Secret Service agents who brought prostitutes back to their hotel rooms in Colombia last week had copies of the president’s schedule in their rooms, which raises the issue of a potential security breach, officials told Reuters.

Secret Service personnel were in Cartagena in advance of President Barack Obama’s arrival at the Summit of the Americas, a trade conference, over the weekend. At least 11 were placed on administrative leave and flown back to the United States on Saturday when it came to light that they had hired prostitutes. Their security clearances have since been pulled, NBC News has learned.

The story might have been kept a secret had it not been for a disgruntled woman who claimed she had not been paid by one of the agents. She argued with two Secret Service agents and then went to Colombian police. Local police reported the matter to the U.S. Embassy, Reuters reported.


It has also been revealed that among the Secret Service personnel involved were full-fledged agents, which further ratchets up the seriousness of the incident, officials told NBC News.

The heavily armed agents play a key role in protecting the president, and their job is to neutralize attacks, according to the agency’s website.

It was initially reported that five military service members were also involved, but that they may have only broken curfew. Now officials say that more were involved and that they did more than just return to their hotel rooms too late –- several also paid for prostitutes.

The military service members involved were explosives experts and dog handlers from the Navy, Army and Marine Corps. The military advance team also included linguists and drivers, but they have not been implicated in the Wednesday night incident.

Members of elite unit among those suspended

At a press conference Sunday, Obama said he would be angry if the allegations turned out to be true.

“When we travel, we have to observe the highest standards,” he said. “We’re not just representing ourselves. We’re here on behalf of our people.”

The Senate Judiciary Committee, which oversees the Secret Service, is weighing whether to launch an investigation into the prostitution allegations.

Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta and Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said they were embarrassed by the allegations.

“What we do know is that several of our members distracted the issue from what was a very important regional engagement for our president,” Dempsey said. “We let the boss down because nobody is talking about what went on in Colombia other than this incident, so to that extent we let him down.”

But Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., defended agents in the service, calling them outstanding. He received Secret Service protection in 2008 when he was running for president.

“I am confident that the overwhelming majority of Secret Service people did not engage in this kind of behavior,” McCain said.

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Trial under way for suspect in subway bomb plot
Apr 17th 2012, 00:15

By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

The three young men were high school friends from Queens, N.Y., seeking to avenge how Muslims have been treated by the United States. In 2008, prosecutors say, they traveled to Pakistan, where they were trained by al-Qaida militants who asked them to be suicide bombers. They agreed.

Federal prosecutors say they planned three separate suicide attacks on the New York City subway system in September 2009, around the eighth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York. Before they could act, however, their plans were foiled by police and the FBI. Suspects Najibullah Zazi and Zarein Ahmedzay pleaded guilty and agreed to testify against Adis Medunjanin, 28, a U.S. citizen born in Bosnia. Medunjanin’s trial started Monday.

In opening arguments, Medunjanin’s lawyer said he backed out of the plot, which Attorney General Eric Holder has called one of the most serious threats to security since the 9/11 attacks.


NYC Subway bomb plot linked to British cell

Ahmedzay, a former yellow cab driver, told a Brooklyn jury that al-Qaida operatives encouraged them to "do as much damage as possible, but be successful the attack need not be spectacular," the New York Daily News reported.  

Ahmedzay testified that the three drove around Manhattan casing potential targets for a terrorist attack. They checked out Grand Central Terminal, Times Square and the New York Stock Exchange. Ultimately, they settled on the subway.

New York subway bomb plotter's father sentenced to 4.5 years

The men "were prepared to kill themselves and everyone else around them — men, women and children," said Assistant U.S. Attorney James Loonam. "These men came so close — within days of carrying out this attack."

In September 2009, Zazi was arrested after driving into Manhattan with a detonator and materials to build an explosive device. Medunjanin was arrested in early 2010 after he tried to crash his car – prosecutors called the crash a failed suicide attempt.

Zazi and Ahmedzay have not yet been sentenced. If convicted, Medunjanin faces up to life in prison.  

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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