The panel today told all-but-admitted patron of the "D.C.
Madam" Sen. David Vitter, R-La., that "under the
totality of the specific circumstances present in this matter,
it is appropriate for the Committee to dismiss this matter
without prejudice."
An outside ethics watchdog had lodged a complaint with the
committee against Vitter when his phone number surfaced in
D.C. Madam Deborah Jeane Palfrey's phone records.
Vitter was the highest-profile figure to be implicated in
the D.C. Madam saga, which came to a close last week when
Palfrey, awaiting sentencing, took her own life in Florida.
After his number was found in the phone records of Palfrey's
service last year, Vitter issued a statement that "this
was a very serious sin in my past for which I am, of course,
completely responsible."
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Several years ago, Vitter said in the statement, "I
asked for and received forgiveness from God and my wife in
confession and marriage counseling."
The ethics panel did not give an opinion on the facts of
Vitter's case, arguing it essentially did not have jurisdiction
to do so.
Vitter was not a senator at the time he has admitted to using
the escort service Palfrey once ran, the panel reasoned, and
he had faced no criminal charges nor allegations of abuse
of his office as a result of having paid women to perform
sex acts on him.
The panel said its lack of judgement or punishment did not
mean it approved of "the kind of conduct alleged in this
matter."
Full
article here.