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Re: DrHarleyboy post# 238291

Tuesday, 09/22/2015 7:32:44 PM

Tuesday, September 22, 2015 7:32:44 PM

Post# of 575278
Oh, for crying out loud,Hillary! Tell the truth!

State Department’s account of e-mail request differs from Clinton’s

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By Carol D. Leonnig and Rosalind S. Helderman September 22 at 5:12 PM


Throughout the controversy over her use of a private e-mail system while she was secretary of state, Hillary Rodham Clinton has described her decision last year to turn over thousands of work-related e-mails as a response to a routine-sounding records request.

“When we were asked to help the State Department make sure they had everything from other secretaries of state, not just me, I’m the one who said, ‘Okay, great, I will go through them again,’?” Clinton said Sunday on CBS’s “Face the Nation.” “And we provided all of them.”

[]bBut State Department officials provided new information Tuesday that undercuts Clinton’s characterization. They said the request was not about general recordkeeping but was prompted entirely by the discovery that Clinton had exclusively used a private e-mail system. They also said they first contacted her in the summer of 2014, at least three months before the agency asked Clinton and three of her predecessors to provide their e-mails.

“In the process of responding to congressional document requests pertaining to Benghazi, State Department officials recognized that it had access to relatively few email records from former Secretary Clinton,” State Department spokesman John Kirby said in a statement e-mailed to The Washington Post. “State Department officials contacted her representatives during the summer of 2014 to learn more about her email use and the status of emails in that account.”

Kirby added that the agency then recognized “that we similarly did not have extensive email records from prior Secretaries of State and therefore included them when we requested their records in October 2014.”
Clinton's evolving stance on her private e-mail server
Play Video

During an interview with ABC News, Hillary Clinton apologized for using a private e-mail server during her time as secretary or state. Here are past statements where the presidential hopeful neglected to take personal responsibility for the controversy. (The Washington Post)

The State Department also realized its archives were incomplete, with some senior officials’ e-mails missing.

The discrepancy between Clinton’s timetable and the new information from the State Department prompted a terse letter Tuesday from Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, who has been investigating whether Clinton’s e-mail practices compromised national security.

In the letter, he pointed to documents suggesting that Clinton’s staff moved quickly that summer after she was first contacted about her private account.

He cited a July 23, 2014, e-mail in which employees at Platte River Networks, the private company that was then maintaining her server, discussed sending copies of Clinton’s e-mails overnight to Cheryl Mills, a longtime Clinton adviser. A spokesman for the company confirmed Tuesday that its workers started pulling Clinton’s e-mails to submit to Mills in July 2014.

A Clinton campaign official did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Clinton’s description of her interactions with the State Department over her use of the private system as secretary have emerged as an issue in her presidential campaign.

b][By casting her actions as part of a routine agency review, Clinton, the Democratic front-runner for the White House, has sought to play down any suggestion that her decision to use a private e-mail system was unusual or problematic. She has said repeatedly that it was “permitted” by the State Department and widely known in the Obama administration.

But the early call from the State Department is a sign that, at the least, officials in the agency she led from 2009 to 2013 were concerned by the practice — and that they had been caught off guard upon discovering her exclusive use of a private account.

There was a lot going on behind the scenes before the State Department sent a formal request for work records to Clinton and former secretaries Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice and Madeleine Albright in a Nov. 12, 2014, letter, according to documents and interviews with senior officials.

In the spring and summer of 2014, while it was in the process of trying to find records sought by the newly formed House Select Committee on Benghazi, the State Department’s congressional affairs office found Clinton’s personal e-mail address listed on a few records in a batch of Benghazi documents. And there were no government account emails for Clinton.

“We realized there was a problem,” said a State Department official who until that moment had not been aware of Clinton’s private e-mail set-up. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the case.

The department knew the Republican-led committee would ask about the private e-mail domain — @clintonemail.com — listed on some of the new documents. Secretary of State John F. Kerry, who was also learning about her exclusive use of the e-mail account for the first time — was eager to “rip off the Band-Aid,” as two key aides described it, and to make sure the agency provided the Benghazi committee with whatever records they properly requested.

State Department staffers were trying to figure out where her work e-mails were stored and how they might try to assemble them, one official said.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/state-departments-account-of-e-mail-request-differs-from-clintons/2015/09/22/54cd66bc-5ed9-11e5-8e9e-dce8a2a2a679_story.html

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