Wednesday, September 14, 2005

Abuse of Priorities

Hope the people of Louisiana with FIRE this person when he is up for reelection again.

Congressman removed items from home while on Guard tour

WASHINGTON -- A Louisiana congressman being escorted by National Guard troops removed personal items from his home in flooded New Orleans while military helicopters and emergency workers raced to save thousands of victims stranded on rooftops in public shelters.

Rep. William Jefferson, D-La., said he had planned to check on his house Sept. 2 after traveling with President Bush to survey the damage across the Gulf Coast and accepted the Louisiana National Guard escort only after his staff and Capitol police warned him it was unsafe to travel alone because of looting and lawlessness in the city.

After touring the flood damaged city from the air, and visiting evacuees at the Louisiana Superdome and at the city's Convention Center, Jefferson said he asked his National Guard escorts to drive him to his Uptown neighborhood, several miles from the Superdome.

"I was intending to go to my neighborhood for sure, if I could get there, I didn't know what the condition was," Jefferson said Wednesday. "I was curious to know and everybody in my family was curious to know, what was the condition of our house. Was it underwater? Was it looted?"

While Jefferson was checking out his house, the military truck that brought him there got stuck in the mud and a second truck had to be sent to rescue the congressmen and his National Guard escort, said Maj. Ed Bush, a spokesman for the Louisiana National Guard.

A Coast Guard helicopter rescuing people stranded on rooftops also spotted the group at the congressman's house and sent a rescue swimmer down to investigate. Jefferson said he and the guardsmen tried to wave the helicopter off, but the pilot apparently didn't see him and the swimmer ended up kicking in a door and entering his house through a balcony.

But Cmd. Brendan McPherson, a spokesman for the Coast Guard, said the helicopter pilot responded to a distress signal from the National Guardsmen outside Jefferson's house before lowering the rescue swimmer. At the time, water was waist deep around the house and the guardsmen were standing on the front porch.

"It was clear to them that they were being signaled, as they had been in many other cases when someone was in distress," McPherson said.

An Air National Guardsman who had hitched a ride on the truck carrying Jefferson from the Superdome was rescued at Jefferson's home, McPherson said, but Jefferson declined the Coast Guard offer of help. Three other people also were rescued from the congressman's neighborhood before the helicopter returned to Mobile, Ala., he said.

Jefferson said the visit to his house, first reported Tuesday night by ABC News, would have been over quickly if the truck had not gotten stuck. He said the only things he removed from his house were two suitcases and two laptop computers belonging to his daughters, who were preparing to leave for college and an internship when the storm struck.

Lt. Col. Pete Schneider, another Louisiana Guard spokesman, said Jefferson was the only official who requested a Guard tour of the city via ground transportation.

"Congressman Jefferson wanted to tour his district and was put in a high water vehicle for that purpose," he said.

Schneider declined to comment when asked if the tour had distracted from the Guard's other duties.

"I didn't want to have anybody with me," Jefferson said. "I was perfectly happy just by myself but they thought it was too risky. I regret that there was any need to have anybody there."

Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.katc.com/Global/story.asp?S=3850954

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