In what can now officially be deemed a trend, three Army officers have been reassigned from their White House posts amid an investigation into what exactly they were doing with a group of “foreign women” during their stopover in Vietnam with President Donald Trump. The Washington Post reports that the service members were working for the White House Communications Agency, a unit that provides the president, vice president, Secret Service, and other officials with secure communications while they’re on the road. According to the Post, the Pentagon is “scrutinizing” the “behavior” of the personnel during the Vietnam portion of Trump’s 12-day Asia trip earlier this month, which allegedly included breaking curfew and “improper contact with foreign women.” If the non-commissioned officers are found guilty, they could lose their security clearances, or face administrative discipline or courts-martial.

That’s a decidedly unambiguous punishment for such euphemistic activity. Perhaps the gentlemen protecting the president should have observed the Mike Pence rule. Curfew-breaking, as we know, is not an infraction the Pentagon takes lightly.

The news comes on the heels of an August incident wherein four military personnel with the same White House unit were flown home early from Panama after facing allegations that they’d taken “foreign women after hours into a secure area as they were preparing for [Vice President Mike] Pence’s arrival.” Though they’ve now occurred twice in just a few months, such incidents aren’t limited to the Trump White House. Back in April 2012, a whopping 13 Secret Service officers and agents preparing for the arrival of President Barack Obama in Cartagena, Colombia, were flown back to Washington after accusations that they brought prostitutes to their hotel room; ultimately, 10 lost their jobs. In his testimony before Congress, then-Secret Service director Mark Sullivan said that while the situation was humiliating, there was never any risk to the president.