WaPo | The Justice Department has “systemic” problems in how it handles
sexual harassment complaints, with those found to have acted improperly
often not receiving appropriate punishment, and the issue requires “high
level action,” according to the department’s inspector general.
Justice
supervisors have mishandled complaints, the IG said, and some
perpetrators were given little discipline or even later rewarded with
bonuses or performance awards. At the same time, the number of
allegations of sexual misconduct has been increasing over the past five
years and the complaints have involved senior Justice Department
officials across the country.
The cases examined by the IG’s
office include a U.S. attorney who had a sexual relationship with a
subordinate and sent harassing texts and emails when it ended; a Civil
Division lawyer who groped the breasts and buttocks of two female trial
attorneys; and a chief deputy U.S. marshal who had sex with
“approximately” nine women on multiple occasions in his U.S. Marshals
Service office, according to investigative reports obtained by The
Washington Post under a Freedom of Information Act request.
“We’re
talking about presidential appointees, political appointees, FBI
special agents in charge, U.S. attorneys, wardens, a chief deputy U.S.
marshal, a U.S. marshal assistant director, a deputy assistant attorney
general,” Justice Department Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz said
in an interview.
On May 31 — before the issue exploded into the national consciousness — Horowitz sent a memo about sexual harassment to Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein.
“When
employees engage in such misconduct, it profoundly affects the victim
and affects the agency’s reputation, undermines the agency’s
credibility, and lowers employee productivity and morale,” Horowitz
wrote. “Without strong action from the Department to ensure that DOJ
employees meet the highest standards of conduct and accountability, the
systemic issues we identified in our work may continue.”
Rosenstein
said he would review the IG’s memo and consider whether additional
guidance to Justice employees was required to ensure all misconduct
allegations are handled appropriately.
“It
is fortunate that there are relatively few substantiated incidents of
sexual harassment, but even one incident is too many,” Rosenstein said
in a statement at the time.
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