On April 26, 2007, Tobias was questioned by Federal investigators, regarding any services he received from the
escort service owned by
Deborah Jeane Palfrey, who has been charged with
prostitution-related
racketeering. The next day, April 27, 2007, Tobias resigned from his
U. S. State Department position as Director of US Foreign Assistance and as Administrator of the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID). A State Department press release said only he was leaving for "personal reasons."
Denouncements of prostitution As President Bush's AIDS Coordinator, Tobias was responsible for setting policy detailing which countries would receive monies from various US agencies, how much, and what the rules governing assignment of those funds would be. As AIDS Coordinator, he discussed the rules in an interview with
PBS'
Frontline where he detailed a legal requirement that recipients of U.S. aid denounce prostitution: The Congress I think very appropriately has put into the legislation that created this program that organizations, in order to receive money, need to have a policy opposed to prostitution and sex trafficking. I don't think it's too difficult for people to be opposed to prostitution and sex trafficking, which are in fact two contributing causes to the spread of HIV/AIDS. I think when organizations initially became aware of that requirement, some organizations were concerned about what the implications of that might be, but we implemented that in the first year with non-U.S. organizations. We're now implementing that requirement with U.S. organizations. And so far, I really know of no problems that we've had on the ground. "I think it is somewhat ironic and hypocritical that he would patronize an escort service while he was denying funding to organizations who want to help prostitutes, and supporting a policy that obviously forbids fraternizing with prostitutes," said
Jodi Jacobson, executive director for the Center for Health and Gender Equity, Washington, D.C. The Bush administration's policy, said Jacobson and others, has led to the closure of numerous programs that had been teaching job skills to sex workers, forcing many prostitutes out of brothels and into the street.
Advocacy of abstinence over condom usage and 'safe sex' In his capacity as Director of Foreign Assistance, Tobias encouraged
sexual abstinence, and discounted the use of
condoms, in preventing HIV/AIDS. "Statistics show that condoms really have not been very effective," Tobias told a news conference in
Berlin on April 21, 2004. Later, in March 2005, Tobias told PBS'
Frontline: ==See also==