Contact: Darby 
Beck                                      
                                 For Immediate 
Release:
darby.beck@leap.cc                                                    
                    Wednesday April 15, 
2015
415.823.5496
HOUSE OVERSIGHT 
COMMITTEE CONDEMNS DEA ADMIN’S TRACK RECORD OF 
INCOMPETENCE
Official 
Bipartisan Statement Declares “No Confidence” in DEA Administrator Michele 
Leonhart 
Washington D.C. – 
Today, twenty two members of the US House Committee on Oversight and Government 
Reform issued a statement of ‘No Confidence” in Drug Enforcement Administrator 
Michele Leonhart for continued failed leadership during numerous scandals and 
direct conflicts with the Obama Administration. The bipartisan statement was 
issued in the wake of congressional hearings investigating a sex scandal 
involving DEA agents in South America who purchased sex workers with American 
tax dollars. 
“There’s simply no 
excuse for the outrageous behavior of the DEA’s so-called leadership,” said 
Maj. 
Neill Franklin (Ret.), executive director 
for Law 
Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), a criminal 
justice group working to end the drug war. “Leonhart just helps us add to the 
list of reasons of why we need to rethink our entire approach to drug 
policy.”
The Justice 
Department’s Office of the Inspector General currently has six open 
investigations into scandals perpetrated by the DEA involving murder and 
torture, covert data collection of Americans used for evidence fabrication, and 
a massacre in Honduras. In addition, Leonhart has repeatedly flaunted 
administration policy and opposed policies based on scientific evidence and best 
practices. 
LEAP is committed to 
ending decades of failed policy that have created underground markets and gang 
violence, fostered corruption and racism, and largely ignored the public health 
crisis of addiction. The war on drugs has cost more than one trillion dollars, 
yielded only disastrous outcomes, and ultimately diverted the penal system’s 
attention away from more important crimes. 
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