Editors’ Blog - 2006
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05.05.06 | 1:48 pm
Oh my … Goss

Oh my … Goss out at CIA.

What about Kyle “Dusty” Foggo?

Late Update: Here at TPM HQ we were listening to the president’s announcement. And the talking heads on CNN were speculating whether Goss’s departure might be part of Josh Bolten’s ‘new blood’ shake up in the Bush administration. I don’t suppose it has anything to do with the fact that Goss is neck deep in the Wilkes-Corruption-and-Hookers story that’s been burbling in the background all week. We don’t know definitely why Goss pulled the plug yet. But the CIA Director doesn’t march over to the White House and resign, effective immediately, unless something very big is up.

(Point of pride ed. note: TPMmuckraker has been on top of this story all week.)

05.05.06 | 2:52 pm
As I said a

As I said a short time ago, we don’t know definitively yet that Porter Goss resigned over the Wilkes-Cunningham Hookergate story. But on the assumption that that is the case, let me give you a bit of background on what we’ve been following in recent weeks.

The hookers in Hookergate are, of course, the sizzle. But there’s a bigger story. It stems directly from the Randy “Duke” Cunningham bribery scandal, which many had figured was over. But it’s not. You may have noticed that while Duke Cunningham is already in jail and Mitchell Wade has already pled guilty to multiple charges, Brent Wilkes has never been touched. Wilkes is the ur-briber at the heart of the Cunningham scandal, you can see pretty clearly by reading the other indictments and plea agreements. Wade was Wilkes’ protege.

Now, on the surface one might surmise that the prosecutors are just taking their time, putting together their best case.

I hear different.

Wilkes has deep ties into the CIA. The focal point of those ties is to Kyle “Dusty” Foggo, the man Porter Goss appointed to the #3 position at CIA when he took over the Agency last year. Remember, Wilkes’ scam was getting corrupt contracts deep in the ‘black’ world of intelligence and defense appropriations, where there’s little or no oversight. Foggo was in the contracting and procurement field at the CIA. So you can see how he and Wilkes, who have been friends since high school, had plenty to talk about.

The CIA wasn’t the only place Wilkes and his protege Wade plied their corrupt trade. There were also in the mix contracting on the Bush Pentagon’s extra-constitutional spying operations. And I am told that senior appointees at the DOD knew about their corruption but overlooked it.

Now, since the Cunningham scandal got under, and particularly of late, there’s been a big tug of war between federal law enforcement and the CIA over whether to really go after Wilkes. Probably a little more specificity is in order there, folks at CIA in the orbit of Foggo and presumably Goss.

Now, how does Goss know Foggo?

That’s how we get into the other part of this story — those ‘hospitality suites’, that moveable feast of food, poker and love, Brent Wilkes ran in Washington for maybe fifteen years. We hear that’s how Goss got to be friends with Foggo, whom he later promoted to executive director of the CIA, the number 3 post at the Agency.

Now, last week, Goss denied he had attended any of Wilkes’ parties, in answer to a question from TPMmuckraker. Foggo admitted attending the parties but claimed he’d never seen the hookers.

Now, corrupt contractors saucing up Agency officials and members of Congress to get contracts and free money. Hospitality suites where the saucing takes place. Hookers in the mix. It’s going on for more than a decade, various members of the key committees in the mix. Goss, former member of one of those committees, appoints one of the key players in all this mess as the number three guy at CIA? The feds leaning hard on the limo company owner who probably knows all the details and already has a long rap sheet and can’t afford another conviction?

There’s a lot going on here, a lot we don’t know, what’s connected and what’s coincidence. But this is the backstory. And why this story is likely to turn out to be a very big deal.

05.05.06 | 3:55 pm
Gosss statement on resignation.

Goss’s statement on resignation.

05.05.06 | 4:32 pm
On Kennedy I agree

On Kennedy, I agree with Sullivan.

05.05.06 | 10:03 pm
Larry Johnson gives us

Larry Johnson gives us the run-down on what his sources are telling him about why Porter Goss resigned.

05.05.06 | 10:42 pm
Time General Michael V.

Time: General Michael V. Hayden, “who has a close rapport with Vice President Cheney”, likely to get CIA top job.

05.05.06 | 10:54 pm
WaPo Foggo tells colleagues

WaPo: Foggo tells colleagues he’s resigning next week.

05.05.06 | 11:07 pm
LAT on politicization under

LAT on politicization under Goss …

Four former deputy directors of operations once tried to offer Goss advice about changing the clandestine service without setting off a rebellion, but Goss declined to speak to any of them, said former CIA officials who are aware of the communications. The perception that Goss was conducting a partisan witch hunt grew, too, as staffers asked about the party affiliation of officers who sent in cables or analyses on Iraq that contradicted the Defense Department’s more optimistic scenarios.

05.05.06 | 11:18 pm
Wed seen signs of

We’d seen signs of it. But the WSJ got the goods. Kyle “Dusty” Foggo, #3 man at CIA, hand-picked by Porter Goss, is under federal criminal investigation in the Wilkes-Cunningham bribery and contracts scandal.

05.06.06 | 2:05 pm
NY Daily News Kyle

NY Daily News: “Kyle (Dusty) Foggo, the No. 3 official at the CIA, could soon be indicted in a widening FBI investigation of the parties thrown by defense contractor Brent Wilkes, named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the bribery conviction of former Rep. Randall (Duke) Cunningham, law enforcement sources said.”

Also from the NYDN: “”It’s all about the Duke Cunningham scandal,” a senior law enforcement official told the Daily News in reference to Goss’ resignation. Duke, a California Republican, was sentenced to more than eight years in prison after pleading guilty in November to taking $2.4 million in homes, yachts and other bribes in exchange for steering government contracts.”