HILLARY CLINTON RELINQUISHES E-MAIL SERVER
The presidential hopeful finally agrees to surrender her e-mail device to the feds.
Decision advances the investigation of where classified information was sent.
washington» Hillary Clinton on Tuesday relented to months of demands that she relinquish the personal e-mail server she used while secretary of state, directing the device be given to the Justice Department.
The decision advances the investigation into the Democratic presidential front-runner’s use of a private e-mail account as the nation’s top diplomat, and whether classified information was improperly sent via — and stored on — the home-brew e-mail server she ran from her house in suburban New York City.
Clinton campaign spokesman Nick Merrill said she has “pledged to cooperate with the government’s security inquiry, and if there are more questions, we will continue to address them.”
It’s not clear whether the device will yield any information — Clinton’s attorney said in March that no e-mails from the main personal address she used while secretary of state still “reside on the server or on back-up systems associated with the server.”
Clinton had to this point refused demands from Republican critics to turn over the server to a third party, with attorney David Kendall telling the House committee investigating the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya, that “there is no basis to support the proposed third-party review of the server.”
Republicans jumped on Tuesday’s decision to change course, as well as the additional disclosure that two e-mails that traversed Clinton’s personal system were subsequently given one of the government’s highest classification ratings.
“All this means is that Hillary Clinton, in the face of FBI scrutiny, has decided she has run out of options,” Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus. “She knows she did something wrong and has run out of ways to cover it up.”
Federal investigators have begun looking into the security of Clintons’ e-mail setup amid concerns from the inspector general for the intelligence community that classified information may have passed through the system.
There is no evidence she used encryption to shield the e-mails or her personal server from foreign intelligence services or other potentially prying eyes. Kendall has said previously that Clinton is “actively cooperating” with the FBI inquiry.
In March, Clinton said she exchanged about 60,000 e-mails in her four years in the Obama administration, about half of which were personal and were discarded. She turned over the other half to the State Department in December.
“As she has said, it is her hope that State and the other agencies involved in the review process will sort out as quickly as possible which e-mails are appropriate to release to the public, and that the release will be as timely and transparent as possible,” Merrill said Tuesday.
Also Tuesday, Kendall gave to the Justice Department three thumb drives containing copies of work-related e-mails sent to and from her personal e-mail addresses via her private server.
Kendall gave the thumb drives, containing copies of roughly 30,000 e-mails, to the FBI after the agency determined he could not remain in possession of the classified information contained in some of the emails, according to a U.S. official not authorized to speak publicly.
Word that Clinton had relented on giving up possession of the server came as Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa said two e-mails that traversed Clinton’s personal system were deemed “Top Secret, Sensitive Compartmented Information” — a rating that is among the government’s highest classifications. Grassley said the inspector general of the nation’s intelligence community had reported the new details to Congress on Tuesday.