Watchdog faults VA chief over handling of sex assault report
The 47-page report by the VA’s internal watchdog paints a portrait of a department led by senior officials who were indifferent, if not hostile, to the issues at the department’s flagship medical center in the nation’s capital. It found that Wilkie acted unprofessionally if not unethically, in the case of the
Wilkie and other senior officials declined to fully cooperate with the investigation. For that reason, VA Inspector General
Wilkie said the allegations are false.
The findings are a black eye for a department that has seen improved performance and veterans’ satisfaction with VA care under a departing Trump administration. But there also has been persistent turmoil, ethical challenges and disarray in its leadership. The department has received particular criticism for an unwelcoming culture for female veterans, the military’s fastest growing subgroup.
“The response of Secretary Wilkie and senior VA officials to the veteran’s complaint of sexual assault was troubling,” Missal said in a statement. “Scrutinizing the veteran’s background is contrary to VA’s stated goal to serve veterans with respect. Every VA employee should commit to making VA facilities safe and welcoming places where such complaints are met with the highest standards of professionalism and responsiveness.”
According to the report, Wilkie showed undue defensiveness once he learned of the complaint in late 2019. He referred the matter as requested to the inspector general's but spent parts of leadership meetings dismissing her concerns as politically motivated, the report said.
It said former VA Deputy Secretary
The inspector general could not conclusively confirm that Wilkie improperly investigated her, in part because of his refusal to fully cooperate with questioning, but had “substantial sworn testimony” of Wilkie repeatedly belittling her. Crenshaw denies discussing the case with Wilkie.
“The tone set by Secretary Wilkie appears to have influenced aspects of the initial VA police investigation and the conduct of other VA employees,” the report said.
Wilkie became VA secretary in 2018 after President
“After nearly a year of investigation, interviews with 65 people and analysis of nearly 1.5 million documents, VA’s inspector general cannot substantiate that I sought to investigate or asked others to investigate the veteran,” Wilkie said.
Trump repeatedly points to an improved VA as one of his top accomplishments. “For years, you’d always see vets and how badly treated they were,” he told a
President-elect
The congressional staffer filed her assault complaint in
The VA medical center in
The report said senior officials showed “an unusual level of engagement” in the police investigation, with one officer reporting that a VA official had remarked that she “made a complaint similar to this before" and seemingly encouraged background checks on her.
If the VA had taken the complaint seriously and reviewed VA police reports, it would have learned that a female VA employee had also previously complained in
The VA says it has strived to improve some services for women, though advocates say change has not come fast enough. A study released by the VA last year found 1 in 4 female veterans using VA health care reported inappropriate comments by male veterans on VA grounds.
Currently, about 10% of the nation’s veterans are women. In the
Pandemic Tests Ability of Medicare Advantage Organizations to Innovate in Work-from-Home Model
Pet Dog Insurance Market to See Huge Growth by 2025 : Petplan, Trupanion, Petfirst
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News