Colombian Prostitute-Gate: What Really Happened?
The Obama administration and the Secret Service came under
fire this week following the revelation that several Secret Service agents
visited a harem while on official duty in Colombia. Shockingly, the agents
betrayed the primary implication of their agency’s name by disclosing their
identity and sharing confidential information with the prostitutes. While
prostitution is legal in Colombia, many have said that the President’s personal
security team ought to adhere to a higher standard of decorum than “When in
Rome.” Additionally, the story became public when one of the agents refused to
pay a prostitute what she said he owed her, offering $50 instead of $250.
Revealing secret identities? Haggling over prices? That doesn’t
sound like the Secret Service so proudly depicted on television and in the
movies. When I heard this story, my antennae shot up, and the results of my investigation
may shock you.
A confidential source revealed to me that Secret Service
agents indeed visited the brothel on the date in question. In fact, it is not
uncommon for agents to visit brothels, drink to excess, or even dabble in
whatever recreational drugs are available in a given area. They perform a
stressful job, and there has long been an unspoken understanding that they are
allowed to let loose while canvassing before the President’s official visit
commences. The agents understand that they have a good deal, and like any
beneficiary of great generosity, they know better than to look a gift horse in
the mouth. The agents are discrete by trade, and would never let it slip that they
are on an assignment, and they would certainly never start the sort of
commotion associated with a price dispute.
Clint Eastwood's character from In the Line of Fire would be ashamed. |
Unfortunately, a perfect storm conspired against the Secret
Service in this case. The same week that the Secret Service was preparing for
President Obama’s trip to Colombia, two graduate students from the University
of Virginia’s Latin American Studies PHD program were taking a
research-oriented spring break trip to Colombia. The students, Myles Hobson, 27
, and Jeremy Little, 28, happened to visit the same brothel as the Secret
Service agents, and happened to be in the adjacent rooms. Moreover, the impish
duo, ashamed to explain their actual occupation to the escorts, stated that
they were undercover Secret Service agents. It may seem implausible that two
civilians would present themselves as Secret Service agents to foreign
prostitutes, but “Secret Service agent” is actually the third most common
fantasy profession chosen by pathetic American men trying to impress foreign
prostitutes, right after “Air Force Pilot” and “Racecar Driver.”
Typically, housing actual Secret Service agents and imposter
Secret Service agents in adjacent rooms would not pose a problem, but the
situation escalated when the graduate students realized they did not have
enough money to pay the high-class escorts. Due to their academic knowledge of
Colombia, the students assumed that the exchange rate would translate into a
relatively affordable price for the prostitutes. What they didn’t realize was
that the market for high-class prostitutes is dominated by foreign dignitaries
and wealthy businessmen, so the prevailing exchange rate does not deflate the
cost. An argument ensued, and when the actual Secret Service agents heard the
words “Secret Service” being yelled through the walls, they assumed they were
under attack.
At that point, the actual agents formulated a plan to
infiltrate the adjoining room. They instructed their prostitutes to knock on
the door then followed them into the room with guns drawn. When the situation
was explained to them, they paid off the difference in cost and quickly left
the hotel. Unluckily, due to Colombia’s high rate of kidnapping, the hotel has
state-of-the-art security cameras near all of the exits that captured footage
of them leaving the building. Additionally, the security guard who had been
called by the students’ prostitutes before the actual agents arrived finally
showed up and started questioning the students about what happened [Ed. Note:
Colombian security guards are famous for being paragons of thoroughness and
integrity]. Since they had already signed the hotel’s registry and listed “Secret
Service” under their occupation, the guard wrote in his report that two Secret
Service agents had a price dispute with two of their prostitutes.
When word of the disturbance got back to the United States,
the security camera footage was enough proof to convince Congressman Darrel
Issa that the story was true, which led to his press release that launched the
scandal. From there, the agents were immediately trotted out to be this week’s
target of American outrage and scorn, even though the real culprits were two
clueless graduate students posing as Secret Service agents as part of a sex
tourism fantasy.