Houston Chronicle

FBI pushes back on Trump claim that China hacked Clinton’s email

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WASHINGTON — The FBI on Wednesday pushed back on an unfounded claim by President Donald Trump that Hillary Clinton’s emails were hacked by China, saying it had found no evidence that the private servers she used while secretary of state had been compromise­d.

Trump asserted early Wednesday, without citing evidence, that China had hacked Clinton’s emails, and he said the Justice Department and the FBI risked losing their credibilit­y if they did not look into the matter further.

Writing on Twitter, Trump alleged that many of the emails that were purportedl­y hacked contained classified informatio­n and called it “a very big story.”

“Hillary Clinton’s Emails, many of which are Classified Informatio­n, got hacked by China. Next move better be by the FBI & DOJ or, after all of their other missteps … their credibilit­y will be forever gone!” Trump wrote in a tweet posted shortly after midnight.

Trump provided no details about the alleged hacking, but his tweets came shortly after the online publicatio­n of a story by the Daily Caller asserting that a Chinese-owned company operating in the Washington area hacked Clinton’s private server while she was secretary of state and obtained nearly all her emails. The publicatio­n cited “two sources briefed on the matter.”

Fox News, which is frequently watched by the president, aired a segment on the report Tuesday night, with a guest calling it a bombshell if true.

Asked about the president’s assertions, the FBI provided a statement Wednesday afternoon that simply said: “The FBI has not found any evidence the servers were compromise­d.”

An FBI spokesman declined to comment on Trump’s call for the bureau to make a “next move.”

Democrats, as well, seized on Trump’s remarks.

“Mr. President, you have at your disposal the resources of the nation’s law enforcemen­t agencies and intelligen­ce community. Use them,” Rep. Adam Schiff, Calif., the top Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said in a tweet.

Trump has long focused on Clinton’s use of private servers as secretary of state and contends that the FBI did not sufficient­ly investigat­e the matter.

During the 2016 campaign, in which Trump faced off against Clinton, then-FBI Director James Comey announced that the agency had found no basis to bring criminal charges against Clinton, the Democratic nominee.

In a July 2016 statement, Comey said the FBI “did not find direct evidence that Secretary Clinton’s personal e-mail domain, in its various configurat­ions since 2009, was successful­ly hacked.” But, he added: “Given the nature of the system and of the actors potentiall­y involved, we assess that we would be unlikely to see such direct evidence.”

A Justice Department inspector general report released in June criticized the latter part of Comey’s statement, saying that while forensics agents could not say with 100 percent confidence that Clinton’s servers had not been compromise­d, they were “fairly confident” that there wasn’t an intrusion.

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