Joseph E. Schmitz


Joseph Edward Schmitz is an American lawyer, former inspector general of the United States Department of Defense and a former executive with Blackwater Worldwide. After working as a watchdog at the Pentagon for three and a half years, Schmitz resigned to return to the private sector. Although allegations questioning his stewardship of the inspector general's office surfaced nine months after his resignation, a high-level review board, the President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency, cleared him of all wrongdoing in 2006. He was named one of Donald Trump's foreign policy advisors for his 2016 presidential campaign.

Biography

Schmitz was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the son of John G. Schmitz, former California State Senator, member of the U.S. House of Representatives, and U.S. presidential candidate in 1972. Schmitz attended Catholic schools as a child and Georgetown Preparatory School for high school while his father served in Congress. He holds a Bachelor of Science from the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland where he was on the wrestling team and a Juris Doctor from Stanford University. His three siblings include Mary Kay Letourneau, Jerome Schmitz and John Schmitz.
Upon graduation from the Naval Academy, Schmitz served in the U.S. Navy for approximately four years, including a stint as an exchange officer with the German Navy. After leaving active duty, Schmitz went to law school and was in the Naval Reserve until 2001. He clerked with James L. Buckley, Circuit Judge for the D.C. Circuit Court and was a special assistant to Attorney General Edwin Meese III during the Reagan Administration. Schmitz entered the private sector in 1987, eventually joining the Patton Boggs law firm in Washington, D.C. He was also an adjunct professor of law at Georgetown University in the 1990s and founded his own firm, Joseph E. Schmitz, PLLC, in 2008.
He is a member of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta and a co-author of the book, Sharia: The Threat to America.
As Inspector General, Schmitz investigated involvement of the U.S. military in the sex trade in South Korea, Bosnia, and Kosovo.
Schmitz writes a column titled "Support and Defend" for the media organization Newsmax. He co-founded the law firm Schmitz & Socarras LLP in 2014 and serves as Chairman of the Board of Directors for CharityEngine, a McLean, Virginia-based software company.

Inspector General of the Department of Defense

Schmitz was nominated by President George W. Bush to be Defense Department Inspector General on June 18, 2001. His nomination was held up in the Senate Armed Services Committee for unknown reasons until March 21, 2002, when he was confirmed by the full Senate by voice vote. One of his first actions as Inspector General was to hire controversial Republican operative L. Jean Lewis as his chief of staff.
Various senior officials in the Defense Department stated that Schmitz had an enduring fascination with Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben, having personally redesigned the Defense Department Inspector General's seal to incorporate the Von Steuben family motto. Schmitz's association with the Germany journalist Henning Von Steuben, the leader of the Von Steuben Family Association, attracted the criticism of Senator Chuck Grassley, who stated that Schmitz had "feted Von Steuben at an $800 meal allegedly paid for by public funds." In 2005, Schmitz canceled a planned $200,000 trip to Germany "to attend a ceremony at a Von Steuben statue" after Grassley questioned the expenditure.

Allegations and resignation

Senator Charles Grassley published numerous allegations against Schmitz toward the end of his almost four-year tenure. All of Grassley's allegations were investigated by an independent Office of inspector general under the auspices of the Integrity Committee of the President's Council on Integrity & Efficiency, which on October 19, 2006, "concluded that there was some wrongdoing."
Schmitz resigned as inspector general of the Defense Department in September 2005 in the wake of new allegations that he intervened to obstruct the FBI investigation of fellow Bush appointee to the Department of Defense Jack Shaw in relation to contracting improprieties in Iraq for which Shaw was fired in December 2004. The allegations also included interference in the investigation of Mary Walker's role in the Torture Memos scandal and Schmitz's redaction of an investigative report on Boeing to remove the names of White House officials before sending it to Congress.
In addition to questions regarding Schmitz's independence from the White House, Grassley submitted complaints that Schmitz had accepted a trip to South Korea paid for by a former lobbying client and similarly obtained eight tickets to a Washington Nationals baseball game.
After resigning, Schmitz took a position with the Prince Group, a holding company for Blackwater Worldwide, which provides security services and training to the U.S. military in Iraq and elsewhere.
During the Syrian Civil War, Schmitz attempted to supply Salim Idris with Ukrainian assault rifles and tons of ammunition.

Literature