Via Gawker.com
Guess this is what it has come to…
Over the past two years, more than a dozen Securities and Exchange employees and contractors have tried to view pornography on government computers at least 8,273 times. Here’s what they were looking at while the global financial system cratered.
The Washington Times broke the story of the SEC’s porn problem, which became the subject of numerous inspector general investigations, last month. And Dealbreaker subsequently published one report of an inspector general investigation into an SEC regional supervisor who viewed transvestite porn at work as stress relief.
Now we’ve obtained reports of 16 investigations into porn-surfing by SEC employees and contractors (one of them is a woman!), including one man who said his daily porn viewing at work was limited to “no longer than an hour and a half a day.” The man told investigators that his porn habit grew out of looking at photos of men in bathing suits, which is sometimes known as “gateway porn”:
It’s unclear from the investigation report precisely what the man did (or does) for the SEC, but it’s clear from the context of an interview transcript that he attended graduate school and works in a professional capacity. Two video files found on his computer were referred to the FBI because investigators suspected that the men depicted having sex in them were underage:
Anyway, here’s the full list of sites referenced in all the investigations. Enjoy!
UPDATE: While the Washington Times was the first place to obtain detailed investigation reports into the SEC porn issue last month, the good people at ProPublica noted the existence of the investigations last year.
Send an email to the author of this post at john@gawker.com.
No wonder they couldn’t catch Made-off. They were too busy Jerking-off. Fucking clowns. Expect nothing from criminals than criminality. SEC = Sex Exchange Commission. Nice going fellaz.
WOW! This makes Elliot Spitzerout look tamed! LOL…
*Christopher Cox, the former chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, who has been blamed for the agency’s lax enforcement and failure to catch Bernie Madoff, now works as a corporate partner in the Orange County office of Bingham McCutcheon law firm. Cox has defended his leadership, claiming that he provided a “steady hand” at the SEC during a moment of crisis.
…WHATEVER!!!