Threats reportedly shocked Petraeus

Mistress saw general’s friend as rival

Jill Kelley leaves her home Monday in Tampa, Fla. Kelley is identified as the woman who received harassing e-mails from Gen. David Petraeus’ paramour, Paula Broadwell.
Jill Kelley leaves her home Monday in Tampa, Fla. Kelley is identified as the woman who received harassing e-mails from Gen. David Petraeus’ paramour, Paula Broadwell.

— CIA Director David Petraeus was shocked to learn last summer that his mistress was suspected of sending threatening e-mails warning another woman to stay away from him, former staff members and friends told The Associated Press on Monday.


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Petraeus told these associates his relationship with the second woman, Tampa socialite Jill Kelley, was platonic, though his biographer-turned lover Paula Broadwell apparently saw her as a romantic rival. Retired Gen. Petraeus also denied to these associates that he had given Broadwell any of the sensitive military information purported to have been found on her computer, saying anything she had must have been provided by other commanders during reporting trips to Afghanistan.

The associates spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to publicly discuss the matters,which could be part of an FBI investigation.

Late Monday, an FBI spokesman confirmed that agents went to Paula Broadwell’s home in Charlotte, N.C., but wouldn’t say what they were doing there.

Petraeus, who led U.S. military efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan, resigned his CIA post Friday, acknowledging his extramarital affair with Broadwell and expressing deep regret.

New details of the investigation that brought an end to his storied career emerged as President Barack Obama hunted for a new CIA director and members of Congress questioned why the months-long probe was kept quiet for so long.

Kelley, the Tampa woman, began receiving harassing emails in May, according to two federal law enforcement officials, who also spoke on condition of anonymity. The e-mails led Kelley to report the matter, eventually triggering the investigation that led Petraeus to resign as head of the intelligence agency.

FBI agents traced the purported cyber-harassment to Broadwell, the officials said, and discovered she was exchanging intimate messages with a private Gmail account. Further investigation revealed the account belonged to Petraeus under an alias.

Rather than transmitting e-mails to the other’s inbox, Petraeus and Broadwell composed at least some messages and, instead of transmitting them, left them in a draft folder or in an electronic “drop box,” one official said. Then the other person could log onto the same account and read the draft emails there. This avoids creating an e-mail trail that is easier to trace.

Broadwell had co-written a biography titled All In: The Education of General David Petraeus, published in January. In the preface, she said she met Petraeus in the spring of 2006 while she was a graduate student at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, and she ended up following him on multiple trips to Afghanistan as part of her research.

But the contents of the e-mail exchanges between Petraeus and Broadwell suggested to FBI agents that their relationship was intimate. The FBI concluded relatively quickly - by late summer at the latest - that no security breach had occurred, the two senior law enforcement officials said. But the FBI continued its investigation into whether Petraeus had any role in the harassing e-mails.

Petraeus, 60, told one former associate he began an affair with Broadwell, 40, a couple of months after he became the director of the CIA late last year. They mutually agreed to end the affair four months ago, but they kept in contact because she was still writing a dissertation on his time commanding U.S. troops overseas, the associate said.

FBI agents contacted Petraeus, and he was told that sensitive, possibly classified documents related to Afghanistan were found on her computer. He assured investigators they did not come from him.

One associate also said Petraeus believes that the documents described past operations and had already been declassified. Broadwell had high security clearances on her own as part of her job as a reserve Army major working for military intelligence. But those clearances are only in effect when a soldier is on active duty, which she was not at the time she researched the Petraeus biography.

During a talk last month at the University of Denver, Broadwell said the CIA had detained people at a secret facility in Benghazi, Libya, and that the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Consulate and CIA base there was an effort to free those prisoners.

Obama issued an executive order in January 2009 stripping the CIA of its authority to take prisoners.

CIA spokesman Preston Golson said, “Any suggestion that the agency is still in the detention business is uninformed and baseless.”

Broadwell did not say who told her about CIA activities in Libya.

A Petraeus associate said the retired general was shocked to find out about Broadwell’s emails to Kelley. Petraeus was not shown the messages, but investigators told him the emails told Kelley to stay away from the general in a threatening tone.

Petraeus told former staff members and friends that he was a friend of Kelley and her surgeon husband, Scott, and regularly visited their home, which overlooks Tampa Bay.

Jill Kelley, 37, served as a sort of social ambassador for U.S. Central Command, hosting parties for the general when Petraeus was commander there from 2008-2010.

Kelley regularly kept in touch with then-Gen. Petraeus when he became commander of the Afghan war effort, the two exchanging near-daily emails and instant messages, two of his former staff members say. But those messages were exchanged in accounts that his aides monitored as part of their duties and were not romantic in tone, the staff members said.

Kelley did not answer the door at her Tampa home Monday morning. The Kelleys released a statement Sunday saying she and her family had been friends with the Petraeus family for five years and wanted to respect their privacy.

Petraeus and his family are devastated over the affair and its revelation, especially Holly Petraeus, who “is not exactly pleased right now,” after 38 years of marriage, said Steve Boylan, a friend and former Petraeus spokesman who spoke to him over the weekend.

“Furious would be an understatement,” Boylan told ABC’s Good Morning America. The couple has two adult children,including a son who led an infantry platoon in Afghanistan as an Army lieutenant.

Broadwell is married with two young sons and lives in Charlotte, N.C. She has not returned phone calls or e-mails seeking comment.

As the criminal investigation continued into the e-mails to Kelley, FBI Director Robert Mueller and eventually Attorney General Eric Holder were notified that agents had uncovered what appeared to be an extramarital affair involving Petraeus, said one of the law enforcement officials.

Broadwell and Petraeus have each been questioned by FBI agents twice in recent weeks, with both acknowledging the affair in separate interviews. The FBI notified Obama’s director of national intelligence, James Clapper, of the investigation on Nov. 6, Election Day.

Clapper called Petraeus that night and urged him to resign. Clapper informed the White House late Wednesday, and aides informed the president Thursday morning before Petraeus arrived to personally submit his resignation letter.

Some members of Congress are questioning why they weren’t told sooner. Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, who heads the Senate Intelligence Committee, said she wants to know why she had to find out from news reports Friday.

But there were at least a couple of members of Congress who had heard inklings of the affair before the election.Republican Rep. Dave Reichert of Washington state received a tip in late October from an FBI source that the CIA director was involved in an affair. Reichert arranged for an associate of his source at the FBI to call House Majority Leader Eric Cantor on Saturday, Oct. 27, according to Cantor spokesman Rory Cooper.

The FBI agent who contacted Reichert was the same one who first received the allegations from Kelley, a federal law enforcement official said. That agent’s role in the case consisted simply of passing along information from Kelley to the FBI agents who conducted the investigation, but that agent was subsequently told by his superiors to steer clear of the case because they grew concerned that the agent had become obsessed with the investigation, the official said. The agent was a friend of Kelley and long before the case involving Petraeus got under way, the agent had sent Kelley shirtless photos of himself, according to this official.

Cooper said that Cantor notified the FBI’s chief of staff of the conversation but did not tell anyone else because he did not know whether the information from a person he didn’t know was credible.

The FBI responded by telling Cantor’s office that it could not confirm or deny an investigation, but assured the leader’s office it was acting to protect national security. Cooper said Cantor believed that if the information was accurate and national security was affected, the FBI would, as obligated, inform the congressional intelligence committees and others, including House Speaker John Boehner.

One of the law enforcement officials who spoke to the AP said long-standing Justice Department policy and practice is not to share information from an ongoing criminal investigation with anyone outside the department, including the White House and Congress. The official said national security must be involved to notify Capitol Hill.

Although Petraeus has left his post and his biography has been removed from the CIA website, congressional leaders continued Monday to demand that he be prepared to testify in a hearing this week on the events surrounding the deadly Sept. 11 attack on a U.S. mission in Benghazi.

Information for this article was contributed by Nedra Pickler, Larry Margasak, Adam Goldman and Robert Burns of The Associated Press; and by Kimberly Kindy, Karen DeYoung, Carol D. Leonnig, Julie Tate and Greg Miller of The Washington Post.

Front Section, Pages 1 on 11/13/2012

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