With
Hillary Clinton's Email Lies Unravelling, 147 FBI Agents Are On Her
Heels
28
March, 2016
Earlier
this month, conservative legal advocacy group Judicial Watch released
a series of documents obtained
via an FOIA request which appear to prove that Hillary Clinton knew
her BlackBerry wasn’t secure when she and her staff moved into
Mahogany Row (the nickname given to the set of offices reserved for
senior officials in the Department of State).
E-mail
exchanges between Senior Coordinator for Security Infrastructure
Donald Reid and the NSA show Clinton
was intent on obtaining a secure BlackBerry that she could use in
restricted areas.
Although
Clinton would of course be given a desktop computer on which she
could safely conduct state business, Reid said the Secretary had
become “addicted” to her BlackBerry during her ill-fated 2008
Presidential campaign. “The
issue here is one of personal comfort,”
an e-mail from Reid reads. “S [Secretary Clinton] does not use a
personal computer so our view of someone wedded to their email (why
doesn’t she use her desktop when in SCIF?) doesn’t fit this
scenario … during the campaign she was urged to keep in contact
with thousands via a BB … once
she got the hang of it she was hooked …
now everyday [sic], she feels hamstrung because she has to lock her
BB up.”
When
the NSA wasn’t receptive, long-time Clinton aid and BlackRock crony
Cheryl Mills tried her hand at convincing security officials to find
a work around for Clinton’s BlackBerry but she too was rebuffed.
“The department's designated NSA liaison, whose name was redacted
from the documents, expressed concerns about security vulnerabilities
inherent with using BlackBerry devices for secure communications or
in secure areas,” AP recounts, adding that “Clinton began sending
work-related emails through private accounts soon
after, in March 2009.”
Or
so the story goes. In fact, however, Clinton
may have begun using the private server housed in her basement before
March.
And while there’s some ambiguity, that would seem to contradict
statements she made under oath.
"Conservative
legal watchdogs have discovered new emails from Hillary
Clinton’s private email server dating back to the first days of her
tenure as secretary of State," The
Hill reports,
referencing newly released messages turned up by Judicial Watch.
"The previously
undisclosed February 2009 emails between Clinton from her
then-chief of staff, Cheryl Mills, raise new questions about the
scope of emails from Clinton’s early days in office that were not
handed over to the State Department for recordkeeping and may have
been lost entirely."
Here, for instance, is a message dated February 13 that appears to
reference the meeting Mills had with the NSA:
Just
to clarify, this is a problem because Clinton's campaign has
contended that she did not use the personal account prior to March
and the publicly released e-mails begin on March 18.
Again,
there's some ambiguity here. “[Clinton] has previously
acknowledged that she emailed with department officials before March
18, 2009, the date of the first email in the collection that former
Secretary Clinton provided to the Department in December 2014,"
a State Department official said last week. “Former Secretary
Clinton has also indicated that she
does not have access to work-related emails beyond those she turned
over to the Department
."
So
essentially, the argument is that although there were indeed work
related e-mails sent prior to March 18, Clinton could not access them
to turn them over - or something. The story keeps changing. And
indeed that's the whole problem. At this point it's abundantly clear
that Clinton would have been far better off telling the truth from
the very beginning and the fact that incremental information
continues to surface certainly seems to suggest that the former First
Lady fully intends to admit only
what someone else can prove.
That doesn't exactly inspire much trust.
“So
now we know that, contrary to her statement under oath suggesting
otherwise, Hillary Clinton did not turn over all her government
emails,” Tom Fitton, the head of Judicial Watch said in a
statement. “We
also know why Hillary Clinton falsely suggests she didn’t
use clintonemail.com account prior to March, 18, 2009 —
because she didn’t want Americans to know about her February 13,
2009, email that shows that she knew her Blackberry and email use was
not secure.”
While
we would note that there's a bit of confirmation bias going on there
(i.e. Fitton said the messages he uncovered earlier this month were
proof that Clinton knew her BlackBerry wasn't secure and now he says
the new e-mails are proof that that proof was indeed proof), Fitton
is probably right. Clinton most likely would rather not have been
forced to admit that she and Cheryl Mills essentially tried to
browbeat the NSA into figuring out how to accommodate the BlackBerrys
because the
very fact that they had the conversation in the first place suggests
Clinton and Mills knew the devices weren't secure.
But
more importantly, it seems exceedingly unlikely that Clinton couldn't
have turned over the messages from February had she wanted to. That
is, how is it that she had access to mail on her private sever from
March 18 but not from the beginning of February? Did she permanently
delete the messages? And if so, why?
Well
the FBI intends to find out, because as a new Washington
Post piece (which
you're encouraged to read in its entirety) details, the Bureau now
has 147 agents on the case. "One
hundred forty-seven FBI agents have been deployed to run down leads"
WaPo writes, adding that "the FBI has accelerated the
investigation becauseofficials
want to avoid the possibility of announcing any action too close to
the election."
While
we can always hold out some hope that Clinton will one day be held
accountable and that someone, somewhere will dispel with the notion
that America's political aristocracy is above the law, we can't help
but suspect that we'll never see Hillary Clinton in black and white
stripes - unless it's a pantsuit.
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