- NEW: Rep. Steve Israel calls for a criminal investigation
- White House: President Obama awaits Eric Shinseki's internal report on problems
- Secretary Shinseki: "We are doing all we can to accelerate access to care"
- 1,700 veterans will be contacted by the end of business Friday, a VA official says
Washington (CNN) -- President Barack Obama appears to be asking Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki to set the stage for his own departure, perhaps as soon as Friday.
Obama is waiting for an internal review he ordered from Shinseki on the growing scandal involving sometimes fatal delays in care for veterans before deciding whom to hold accountable, White House spokesman Jay Carney said Thursday.
Shinseki's preliminary report is due this week, Carney told reporters as calls mounted from across the political spectrum for the secretary to step down or be dismissed over problems known for years but apparently never addressed.
The VA inspector general reported preliminarily on Wednesday that at least 1,700 military veterans waiting to see a doctor were never scheduled for an appointment or were placed on a waiting list at the Veterans Affairs medical center in Phoenix, raising the question of just how many more may have been "forgotten or lost" in the system.
In an opinion piece published Thursday in USA Today, Shinseki wrote that he found the report "reprehensible" and that he's "not waiting to set things straight."
"I immediately directed the Veterans Health Administration ... to contact each of the 1,700 veterans in Phoenix waiting for primary care appointments in order to bring them the care they need and deserve," Shinseki wrote.
Shinseki reiterated other steps he's taken, including putting the leadership at the Phoenix facility on leave May 1 and ordering a "nationwide audit of all other major VA health care facilities to ensure understanding of, and compliance with, our appointment policy."
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"We are doing all we can to accelerate access to care throughout our system and in communities where veterans reside," Shinseki wrote. "I've challenged our leadership to ensure we are doing everything possible to schedule veterans for their appointments. We, at the Department of Veterans Affairs, are redoubling our efforts, with commitment and compassion, to restore integrity to our processes to earn veterans' trust."
That wasn't enough for an increasing number of Washington politicians who called for Shinseki to go. A number of Democratic senators -- many of them facing rough re-election battles later this year -- have joined a growing bipartisan chorus urging the secretary to resign or the President to fire him.
"The inspector general's preliminary report makes it clear that the systemic problems at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs are so entrenched that they require new leadership to be fixed," said Mark Udall of Colorado, the first Senate Democrat to call for a change at the top.
Rep. Steve Israel of New York, the head of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, took it one step further, calling for a criminal investigation of those found to have "doctored papers."
"They need to be investigated. They need to be prosecuted. They need to be fired," he told CNN.
The U.S. Department Justice is reviewing the VA inspector general's report but has not formally opened an investigation, Peter Carr, an agency spokesman, has said.
Still, others question whether removing Shinseki would address the core problems at the VA or simply serve as a distraction for now.
"Is him resigning going to get us to the bottom of the problem? Is it going to help us find out what's really going on?," asked House Speaker John Boehner, the chamber's top Republican, adding that his answer so far was "no."
House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi also warned against targeting only Shinseki, telling reporters that "we have to be careful about thinking that just because you remove the top person, means that you've changed the systemic problem that existed in the organization 10 years before Shinseki, or five years at least before Shinseki became the secretary."
Pelosi joined a growing bipartisan push for a criminal investigation of the VA problems, saying "certainly what was done was dishonest."
Meanwhile, the GOP chairman of the House Veterans' Affairs Committee told CNN on Thursday that he will take legal action against the VA to compel it to fully comply with a subpoena seeking documents about the controversy.
Describing a "systemic" practice of manipulating appointments and wait lists at the Phoenix Health Care System, the VA inspector general called for a nationwide review to determine whether veterans at other locations were falling through the cracks.
The report indicated the scope of the investigation had increased, with 42 VA medical centers across the country now under investigation for possible abuse of scheduling practices.
Among the findings at the Phoenix VA, investigators determined that one consequence of manipulating appointments for the veterans was understating patient wait times, a factor considered in VA employee bonuses and raises, the report said.
Carney repeated Thursday that Obama found the report deeply troubling, and a White House official speaking on the condition of anonymity told CNN that Shinseki was on "thin ice" with the President.
The controversy, as CNN first reported, involves delayed care with fatal consequences in some cases. CNN has reported that in Phoenix, the VA used fraudulent record-keeping -- including an alleged secret list -- that covered up excessive waiting periods for veterans, some of whom died in the process.
The VA has acknowledged 23 deaths nationwide due to delayed care. The VA's acting inspector general, Richard Griffin, told a Senate committee in recent weeks that his investigation so far had found a possible 17 deaths of veterans waiting for care in Phoenix. But he added that there was no evidence excessive waiting was the reason.
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CNN's Jason Hanna, Jim Acosta, Wolf Blitzer, Jake Tapper, Eliott C. McLaughlin and Greg Seaby contributed to this report.
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