Texarkana Gazette

Thirty-eight people cited for violations in Clinton email probe

- By Matthew Lee and Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON — The State Department has completed its internal investigat­ion into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of private email and found violations by 38 people, some of whom may face disciplina­ry action.

The investigat­ion, launched more than three years ago, determined that those 38 people were “culpable” in 91 cases of sending classified informatio­n that ended up in Clinton’s personal email, according to a letter sent to Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley this week and released on Friday. The 38 are current and former State Department officials but were not identified.

Although the report identified violations, it said investigat­ors had found “no persuasive evidence of systemic, deliberate mishandlin­g of classified informatio­n.” However, it also made clear that Clinton’s use of the private email had increased the vulnerabil­ity of classified informatio­n.

The Associated Press sent an email seeking comment to a Clinton representa­tive.

The investigat­ion covered 33,000 emails that Clinton turned over for review after her use of the private email account became public. The department said it found a total of 588 violations involving informatio­n then or now deemed to be classified but could not assign fault in 497 cases.

For current and former officials, culpabilit­y means the violations will be noted in their files and will be considered when they apply for or go to renew security clearances. For current officials, there could also be some kind of disciplina­ry action. But it was not immediatel­y clear what that would be.

The report concluded “that the use of a private email system to conduct official business added an increased degree of risk of compromise as a private system lacks the network monitoring and intrusion detection capabiliti­es of State Department networks.”

The department began the review in 2016 after declaring 22 emails from Clinton’s private server to be “top secret.” Clinton was then running for president against Donald Trump, and Trump made the server a major focus of his campaign.

Then-FBI Director James Comey held a news conference that year in which he criticized Clinton as “extremely careless” in her use of the private email server as secretary of state but said the FBI would not recommend charges.

The Justice Department’s inspector general said FBI specialist­s did not find evidence that the server had been hacked, with one forensics agent saying he felt “fairly confident that there wasn’t an intrusion.”

Grassley started investigat­ing Clinton’s email server in 2017, when he was chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. The Iowa Republican has been critical of Clinton’s handling of classified informatio­n and urged administra­tive sanctions.

 ?? Joe Lewnard/Daily Herald via AP ?? ■ Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton answers a question posed by student journalist­s Oct. 11 during the Trailblazi­ng Women of Park Ridge event in Park Ridge, Ill.
Joe Lewnard/Daily Herald via AP ■ Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton answers a question posed by student journalist­s Oct. 11 during the Trailblazi­ng Women of Park Ridge event in Park Ridge, Ill.

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