Bangkok Post

Clinton’s ‘right’ to own emails

Messages in personal account ‘hers to erase’

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WASHINGTON: Hillary Clinton had the right to delete messages from her personal email account that she deemed non-work related while she was Secretary of State, the US Department of Justice said in a court filing.

The filing came in response to legal action filed by Judicial Watch, a conservati­ve monitoring group that wants access to all of Ms Clinton’s emails while she was the top US diplomat.

“There is no question that former Secretary Clinton had authority to delete personal emails without agency supervisio­n. She appropriat­ely could have done so even if she were working on a government server,” the Justice Department wrote in a document filed this week in US District Court in Washington.

Ms Clinton, the front-runner for the Democratic Party presidenti­al nominee, has been dogged for months by revelation­s that she used a private email account and home server in lieu of the official government email system while she was secretary of state from 2009 to 2013.

Under US National Archives State Department policies, “individual officers and employees are permitted and expected to exercise judgment to determine what constitute­s a federal record”, the DOJ said.

The scandal broke in March, and it wasn’t until Wednesday that Ms Clinton publicly apologised for using her private email server.

“That was a mistake. I’m sorry about that. I take responsibi­lity,” she said in an interview with ABC News.

“As I look back at it now, even though it was allowed, I should have used two accounts, one for personal emails, one for work-related emails,” she said.

Ms Clinton turned over 30,000 official emails to the US State Department in late 2014. The messages are being released to the public in batches.

Many contain informatio­n that has been retroactiv­ely classified, raising questions about whether Ms Clinton was inappropri­ately sending and receiving sensitive material and whether sufficient security measures were in place to protect her private server from hackers.

FBI experts are examining the server, which Ms Clinton eventually handed over after months of refusal, to determine whether the arrangemen­t has compromise­d secret government data.

Ms Clinton is scheduled to testify on Oct 22 before a Republican-led House panel investigat­ing the deadly 2012 attack on the US mission in the Libyan city of Benghazi.

Democrats have called for the panel to be disbanded, saying it is nothing but an anti-Clinton witch hunt. But the probe goes on and has even widened to take in the email issue.

In the Senate, two committees are also looking at Ms Clinton’s email woes. Their Republican leaders say they could offer immunity to a former staffer tasked with installing the server in order to secure his testimony.

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