CORONADO, Calif. — The Navy is investigating a decorated SEAL who moonlights as a porn actor.



The Naval Special Warfare Command wants to know whether Chief Special Warfare Officer Joseph Schmidt III properly obtained permission from his commanders for outside work and whether they condoned his acting career, the San Diego Union-Tribune reported Friday.



"There are very clear regulations which govern outside employment ... as well as prohibitions on behavior that is discrediting to the service," said Capt. Jason Salata, a SEALs spokesman.





Navy SEAL by day; porn star by night The Navy is investigating a decorated Navy who moonlights as a porn actor. His wife, porn star Jewels Jade, tells the San Diego Union-Tribune that she recruited Joseph Schmidt as an unpaid performer to cut the filmmaking costs. Schmidt is a 42-year chief special warfare officer in Coronado with 23 years in the military. He has even appeared in recruiting campaigns. The Naval Special Warfare Command is investigating whether Schmidt properly sought permission from his commanders for outside work, whether they condoned it and whether Schmidt engaged in behavior that discredits the service.

Schmidt, 42, has spent 23 years in the military and holds numerous medals, including a citation of valor for combat overseas. He has appeared in recruiting campaigns, even serving as the face of the SEAL program on its website, the Union-Tribune said.

He has appeared under the name Jay Voom in at least 29 sex films over seven years with titles such as "Apple Smashing Lap Dance" to "Strippers Come Home Horny from the Club," the paper said.

Many feature his wife, porn star Jewels Jade.

This Nov. 6. 2016, photo provided by the U.S. Navy, shows Chief Petty Officer Joseph Schmidt III, assigned to the Navy SEAL and SWCC Scout Team, encouraging a young fan to do pushups at the 2016 Stuart Air Show in Stuart, Fla.

Photo Credit: Petty Officer 2nd Class Pyoung K. Yi/Navy via AP

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Schmidt declined to comment to the newspaper, but his wife said many of his fellow SEALs at the Coronado base in Southern California watched the videos online.

"They knew about it at work," Jade said. "He got called in and they said, 'Look, keep it on the low, don't mention the SEAL name and blah, blah, blah.' "

"He was always pretty open about it with the command," she said. "I mean, honestly, all of his buddies knew about it. Everybody knew about it."

Jade first appeared in porn films in 2001, but she left the industry by 2003 to become a wife and mother and help run a real estate firm the couple founded in 2005 while Schmidt was assigned to Virginia.

The business foundered, and the couple filed for bankruptcy after running up nearly $2 million in debt, the Union-Tribune said.

As business losses deepened, Jade turned to stripping to make ends meet and then returned to making porn films.

"It's helped our family. It got us out of a lot of financial issues we were going through," Jade said. "I could take care of the child. I could try to get us out of financial debt."

Jade said she has tried to obtain other work. But her fame, with millions of fans worldwide, made it difficult.

She sought a management job at a San Diego luxury hotel last year but was recognized before she finished her employment interview. "Once you're recognized and you build a brand and you've got your fans who know who you are, when you go to try to find a job, you can't get another job," she said.

Schmidt was transferred to Coronado in 2009. Jade said she recruited her husband as an unpaid performer to cut the costs of making films for her website and film-distribution service.

The military has taken a dim view of its members engaging in racy pursuits.

U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Michelle Manhart, a training instructor, was reprimanded and demoted after she posed nude for Playboy in 2007. The Navy discharged or otherwise disciplined about a dozen servicemen and servicewomen in 1980 for posing in Playboy or Playgirl.

Information from: The San Diego Union-Tribune,