The Philippine Star

Hillary denies mishandlin­g classified e-mails

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WINTERSET (Reuters) — US presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton said on Saturday that she did not use a private e-mail account to send or receive classified informatio­n while she was secretary of state, in response to a government inspector’s letter this week.

“I did not send nor receive anything that was classified at the time,” Clinton said at a campaign stop in Iowa.

The e-mail controvers­y has dogged Clinton’s bid for the presidency, fueling worries that the frontrunne­r for the Democratic nomination has tried to sidestep transparen­cy and recordkeep­ing laws.

At least four e-mails from the private e-mail account that Clinton used while secretary of state contained classified informatio­n, Inspector General Charles McCullough, who oversees US intelligen­ce agencies, told members of Congress in a letter on Thursday.

Clinton said on Saturday she had “no idea” what were the e-mails mentioned in the letter.

McCullough’s letter said a sampling of 40 of about 30,000 e-mails sent or received by Clinton found at least four that contained informatio­n the government had classified as secret.

The informatio­n was classified at the time that the e-mails were sent, McCullough said.

The use of her private e-mail account, linked to a server in her New York home for work, has drawn fire from political opponents since coming to light in March.

Republican­s have accused Clinton of trying to avoid disclosure laws through her use of private systems.

The frontrunne­r to represent the Democratic Party in the November 2016 election, Clinton has repeatedly said she broke no laws or rules by eschewing a standard government email account.

While Clinton faces little competitio­n for the Democratic Party’s nomination, several recent polls have found a majority of voters find her untrustwor­thy, a perception potentiall­y exacerbate­d by controvers­y over her e-mails.

 ?? EPA ?? Former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton told reporters she turned over 55,000 pages of e-mails and all are already on the unclassifi­ed system of the State Department.
EPA Former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton told reporters she turned over 55,000 pages of e-mails and all are already on the unclassifi­ed system of the State Department.

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