Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Trump aides told not to use personal phones — but some do

- By Jeff Horwitz

WASHINGTON » White House officials are clearly instructed: Don’t use your personal phones for official business. But some aides appear to have done it anyway, and it’s getting fresh scrutiny along with questions about the use of personal email accounts.

The inquiries into private communicat­ion could prove uncomforta­ble for President Donald Trump, who relentless­ly attacked Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton for her use of a private email account and server during her time as secretary of state.

Multiple current and former Trump White House officials have used private email accounts and texts from personal phones for private conversati­ons, sometimes using encrypted messaging apps. That’s despite clear directives not to use personal devices for administra­tion business and to save the records if they do.

House lawmakers have requested more informatio­n about the use of private email addresses and texting or the use of messaging apps on personal phones. They’re also asking about the oversight and record-keeping policies of the Trump White House. They acted after word surfaced that White House adviser Jared Kushner set up a private email account after the election to conduct work-related business.

Further, The New York Times recently reported the names of six close Trump advisers, including Kushner, Steve Bannon and Reince Priebus, who have used private email to discuss White House matters. Bannon and Priebus no longer work at the White House.

The extent of private communicat­ions on personal phones — or whether records were retained— is not clear.

Rep. Trey Gowdy, a South Carolina Republican who chairs the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, and the top Democrat on that panel, Rep. Elijah Cummings, sent letters Monday to the White House general counsel and the State Department. They said they want more details on whether staffers are using personal emails, texting or encrypted messaging applicatio­ns, and if they are preserving the records.

The Presidenti­al Records Act requires senior White House staff members to preserve their profession­al communicat­ions, with the records eventually transferre­d to the National Archives. Electronic communicat­ions outside of official channels, such as private email or text messages on a staffer’s personal phone, are supposed to be copied to a government account within 20 days.

White House aides are instructed as part of their training not to use personal devices for official business and are told to save records if they do, said two people with knowledge of administra­tion practices.

A memorandum went out to all White House personnel in February outlining the rules. The memo, provided to The Associated Press, states that records rules apply to “other forms of electronic communicat­ion, including text messages.”

The memo adds: “You should not use instant messaging systems, social networks, or other internetba­sed means of electronic communicat­ion to conduct official business without the approval of the Office of the White House Counsel.”

“Legally, the case is clear — you’re supposed to save this stuff,” said Alex Howard, deputy director of the Sunlight Foundation, which advocates for transparen­cy and open record keeping in government.

Howard said that White House officials who sent and received messages via private channels did not necessaril­y violate the law — if they later forwarded those off-the-books communicat­ions to an official government account or preserved them in some other fashion.

“People will make mistakes,” he said. “The key is, are those mistakes intentiona­l.”

One reason White House aides text from private phones is simple. They cannot send texts from their official phones, a policy set during the Obama administra­tion. When Blackberry devices were standard, a White House communicat­ions system automatica­lly archived those messages.

When smartphone­s supplanted Blackberri­es, however, White House informatio­n technology administra­tors adopted a new policy: No texts at all.

“With iOS and text, you could get messages (and malware) from anyone,” said Tony Scott, Barack Obama’s federal chief informatio­n officer from 2015 until the end of Obama’s second term. The decision to disable texting was made “more from a security perspectiv­e than anything else.”

Trump White House officials aren’t the first to come under scrutiny for private communicat­ions. In 2010, the White House deputy chief technology officer, Andrew McLaughlin, was reprimande­d for using a Gmail account to communicat­e with his former colleagues at Google.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, White House Senior Advisers Steve Bannon, left, and Jared Kushner attend a Cabinet meeting with President Donald Trump in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington.
ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, White House Senior Advisers Steve Bannon, left, and Jared Kushner attend a Cabinet meeting with President Donald Trump in the Cabinet Room of the White House in Washington.

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