A Navy admiral engaged in sexual relations in the White House in
1990 with a federal employee whom he falsely told he was a widower,
according to a report released Friday by the Defense Department.

Rear Adm. John Stufflebeem was demoted and fired from his post as director of the Navy staff.
In March, when the report was submitted to Pentagon officials, Rear
Adm. John Stufflebeem was demoted and fired from his post as director
of the Navy staff.
Stufflebeem told investigators he couldn't
remember the name of the woman he had an affair with. He also lied when
he told investigators he did not engage in sexual relations with the
woman, identified as "Jane Doe," the Defense Department's inspector
general's report said.
Jane Doe, who was then unmarried and
working for a federal agency, told the investigators the allegations
were true, the report said. Her supervisor and Stufflebeem's superiors
supported her testimony.
Stufflebeem was convicted April 18 of
making false official statements to investigators. After the hearing,
called an admiral's mast, he requested retirement.
Jane Doe
told investigators that she and Stufflebeem began their affair on an
overseas trip in 1989, that the married admiral told her he was a
widower who was raising his children as a single parent and that they
had sexual relations several times, including once in a White House room reserved for "military aides with overnight duties."
She also told investigators that Stufflebeem came to her home on
the day in August 1990 when she learned he was married and that she
called him "scum," shut the door in his face and never spoke to him
again. Read the report (PDF)
"We found Ms. Doe to be an extremely credible, candid and articulate
witness who willingly participated in our interview with the knowledge
and support of her husband," the report said.
By contrast, the
report said, Stufflebeem's testimony was "inconsistent with the weight
of the evidence," and "it did not appear Stufflebeem's misstatements in
these areas of testimony were inadvertent."
At issue was
Stufflebeem's removal from his post as a presidential aide in 1990.
Stufflebeem testified that he initiated the request to leave his White
House post because of "close family personal problems." But his
superiors testified that he was removed from the post because of his
relationship with the woman -- and that he admitted the affair.
Jane Doe's supervisor told investigators that when she learned of the
affair from Doe, she confirmed Stufflebeem's marital status and told
Doe what she'd learned.
"Ms. Doe's reaction, according to the supervisor, was one of complete surprise and shock," the report said.
The supervisor also said that she telephoned Stufflebeem's immediate
supervisor to tell him of the affair and that when she called a few
weeks later to follow up, the supervisor told her that "everybody in
town knew Boomer was f'ing some bimbo at the [federal agency]."
Stufflebeem, however, denied to investigators that he had a sexual
relationship with Jane Doe, although he admitted to one kiss and said
he had an "inappropriate relationship" with her because he told her
about his marital problems.
"I did not have sex with this woman," he said during one of two interviews with investigators.
Although he told investigators he could not remember the woman's name,
he testified that he "had to live with shame for a long time" after the
"inappropriate relationship" ended, that he was "racked with guilt" and
"had a terrible time getting myself right with my family."
"So I
have had a great 18-year career since I left the White House," he said,
according to the report. "If this is the end of it, then I still leave
a rewarded individual, thankful for the blessings that I have had."
Investigators found Stufflebeem's remarks inconsistent.
"In our view, comments regarding guilt, shame, and the end of a
distinguished naval career are incongruous with a physical relationship
limited to one kiss," they wrote in the report.
This year,
according to the report, the inspector general's office provided
Stufflebeem with its preliminary findings: that he'd provided "false
and misleading testimony" regarding the nature of his relationship with
Jane Doe, his inability to recall her name and his representation to
her of himself as a widower.
Stufflebeem responded with a vehement denial.
"[I] find it extremely regrettable, in a case that has such far
reaching implications for my career, that you have chosen to question
my integrity," he wrote in a February 15 letter. "The unfortunate truth
in this case is that, as a result of lack of evidence to substantiate
the allegation of a sexual relationship and in lieu of investigating
the underlying allegations, you have chosen to accuse me of being
untruthful as I defended myself against these allegations."
Stufflebeem further castigated the investigators because, at that time,
they had chosen not to interview Jane Doe "in deference to Ms. Doe's
privacy," according to the report. Doe "readily agreed" to testify when
they contacted her after Stufflebeem's rebuttal.
"Ms. Doe
confirmed that she and Stufflebeem had an extensive physical
relationship which began on an overseas trip and lasted intermittently
for approximately eight months," the investigators wrote. "The
relationship included sexual intercourse on approximately one dozen
occasions, to include intercourse during overseas travel, in the White
House and in her home."
Doe also said Stufflebeem told her that
his wife had died of breast cancer, that a woman who answered the phone
when she called his home was the children's nanny and that he continued
to wear his wedding ring "for his daughters who missed their late
mother."
According to the report, the investigation began when
investigators received an anonymous letter containing "significant"
details about the affair. Investigators had received another such
letter in 1999, but it contained no detail and was not investigated.
Stufflebeem became well known in the initial months of the war in Afghanistan,
when he often conducted on-camera television briefings as a Pentagon
spokesman. He was then deputy director for global operations on the
Joint Staff.
He was commander of the 6th Fleet
from May 2005 to September 2007. During that time, he was deputy
commander of Naval Forces Europe, joint force maritime component
commander in Europe, commander of strike and support forces for NATO,
and allied commander with Joint Command Lisbon.