Daily Times (Primos, PA)

WH defends Pence’s use of private email while governor

- By Ken Thomas

WASHINGTON >> A White House spokeswoma­n said Friday that Vice President Mike Pence “did everything to the letter of the law” after public records revealed that he used a private email account to conduct public business as Indiana’s governor.

The Indianapol­is Star reported that emails provided through a public records request show that Pence communicat­ed with advisers through his personal AOL account on homeland security matters and security at the governor’s residence during his four years as governor.

The governor also faced email security issues. Pence’s AOL account was subjected to a phishing scheme last spring, before he was chosen by Donald Trump to join the GOP presidenti­al ticket. Pence’s contacts were sent an email falsely claiming that the governor and his wife were stranded in the Philippine­s and needed money.

As Trump’s running mate, Pence frequently criticized rival Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server as President Barack Obama’s secretary of state, accusing her of purposely keeping her emails out of public reach and shielding her from scrutiny.

Sarah Sanders, the White House spokeswoma­n, doubled down on that defense, stressed to reporters on Air Force One that state and federal laws are different and claiming that is efforts to turn over the messages to be archived are “why anybody even knows about the account.”

“He did everything to the letter of the law,” she said.

Pence spokesman Marc Lotter added that “the comparison is absurd” because Clinton had set up a private server in her home at the start of her tenure at the State Department and, unlike Clinton, Pence did not handle any classified material as Indiana’s governor.

The governor moved to a different AOL account with additional security measures, but has since stopped using the new personal account since he was sworn-in as vice president, said Lotter.

Lotter said Pence “maintained a state email account and a personal email account” like previous governors in the state. At the end of his term Pence directed outside counsel to review all of his communicat­ions to ensure that state-related emails were transferre­d and properly archived by the state, the spokesman said.

The newspaper reported that the office of Pence’s successor, Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb, released more than 30 pages from Pence’s AOL account, but declined to release an unspecifie­d number of emails because they were considered confidenti­al.

Public officials are not barred from using personal email accounts under Indiana law, but the law is interprete­d to mean that any official business conducted on private email must be retained to comply with public record laws.

The state requires all records pertaining to state business to be retained and available for public informatio­n requests. Emails involving state email accounts are captured on the state’s servers, but any emails that Pence may have sent from his AOL account to another private account would need to be retained.

At the end of his term, Pence hired the Indianapol­is law firm of Barnes & Thornburg to conduct a review of all of his communicat­ions and that review is still ongoing, Lotter said. Any correspond­ence between Pence’s AOL account and any aides using a state email account would have been automatica­lly archived, he said.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vice President Mike Pence pauses while speaking before administer­ing the oath of office to Energy Secretary Rick Perry, Thursday, in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington.
ANDREW HARNIK - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vice President Mike Pence pauses while speaking before administer­ing the oath of office to Energy Secretary Rick Perry, Thursday, in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington.

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