Posted on 04/17/2012 4:38:40 PM PDT by kcvl
Inspector General Brian Miller, whose report on the Las Vegas conference touched off congressional investigations, almost seemed overwhelmed by the scope of wrongdoing. "Every time we turned over a stone we found 50 more with all kinds of things crawling out," Miller said.
Family members often were taken along, and in an email exchange between GSA regional executive Jeffrey Neely and his wife last November, they wrote of a planned trip turning into a birthday celebration.
The 17-day trip took place last February to Hawaii, Guam and Saipan. Neely who was placed on administrative leave wrote his wife: "Rough schedule per our conversation. Guess this'll be your birthday present?"
She responded, "Its yo birthday....We gonna pawty like iz yo birthday!"
(Excerpt) Read more at time.com ...
Wouldn’t it be so much better if it was just corruption or racism facilitating this instead of a total citizenry having lost its understanding of the purposes and limitations of government?
Wouldn’t it be so much better if it was just corruption or racism facilitating this instead of a total citizenry having lost its understanding of the purposes and limitations of government?
The joys of posting from my phone.
It doesn’t seem right that congress is doing the investigation. GSA probably arranges most the of congressional junkets for them.
Check out the pictures of the hotel rooms Jeff & wife enjoyed on our dime!!!
Boiling in oil is too good for these people.
The General Services Administration, the great landlord of this nation, is continuing to eat it, as Jeffrey Neely, pictured, one of the GSA executives who took egregious research trips to Vegas prior to organizing an over-the-top conference in the same locale, spent Monday testifying before Congress uselessly (he pled the Fifth). Meanwhile, word of an exploding toilet at GSA headquarters in 2011 manages to not be a letdown despite some GSA employees requests to conceal some of the information involving the exploding toilet for privacy reasons or whatever. What we do know is that said exploding toilet injured two GSA employees, and that the report pertaining to the debacle is referred to as the Domestic Water Incident, not to be confused with the Domestic Water Incident that Jeffrey Neelys wife posted to her Google+ account, which here shows Mr. Neely, during his 2009 research trip, in a clawfoot bathtub overlooking the arid splendor of Las Vegas, two giant glasses of something wine? sangria? Arbor Mist? blood? perched on the edge of the tub.
First to the exploding toilet. Muckrock obtained relevant documents, via self-proclaimed FOI geek Jason Smathers, using the Freedom of Information Act. The documents those that Smathers were able to get, anyway show that the explosion resulted in one person having a shard of a toilet bowl lodged in/on their person and that the water quite obviously ejected out of the toilets onto both victims. The piece of toilet bowl was then removed by a nurse.
People were then warned to avoid the toilets entirely (really!) out of concerns that other toilets might explode and result in pieces of porcelain stabbing them in the rear. Unfortunately because of Neelys Arbor Mist bubble bath at the M Resort and Casino Las Vegas, there was no money for people to be able to perform normal, inexpensive bodily functions.
Sadly, Smathers was not able to obtain personnel and medical files and similar files using the FOIA, which sound enticing, but here are the e-mails and other things he did obtain!
Now to clever Mrs. Neely, who posted an entire photo album on Google+ called MHotel@VegasNov2009, which ABC News quite easily got its hands on. Here are some more pictures from that album:
All packed: A feather boa sits in one of the suitcases in the Neelys' suite
Hell, that's major theft right there.
He made a joking reference at the ceremony to Representative Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia congressional delegate, and presented an award to a GSA staff member who made a rap video making fun of the conference spending.
Previously, Neely had told investigators that a $2,700 party he threw in his Las Vegas hotel suite was an employee-awards event, according to a transcript of the interview.
‘This is an award recognition ceremony ....’ Neely told an internal investigator. ‘That’s what this was. That’s...not a Neely party right. I actually ... it was in a suite that wasn’t even mine.’
The investigator then confronted Neely with his email saying that he and his wife ‘are hosting a party in our loft room. There will be wine and beer and some munchies....’ There was no mention of awards.
When Neely insisted again it was an awards event, the skeptical investigator told him, ‘You realize how this looks?’
‘I get it that it looks funny,’ Neely said.
Where is my the government's iPad?
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