Clinton email chain draws new scrutiny
Candidate sent details, likely on climate talks, to her daughter
WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton forwarded a chain of emails in 2009 to her daughter, Chelsea, that included information, most likely about climate talks, that the State Department later declared to be classified, according to a new batch of emails released Friday.
The email chain was among thousands of messages the FBI uncovered as part of its yearlong investigation into Clinton’s handling of classified information on the private email server she used while secretary of state.
The State Department had previously released parts of the chain with the information entirely redacted. The disclosure Friday appeared to be the first to show that Clinton had forwarded information of a delicate nature to her daughter, who had an email address on her server under a pseudonym.
The chain, among 285 pages of emails released by the State Department on Friday, renewed attention on Clinton’s handling of classified material, an issue that has dogged her campaign from its inception. The FBI reignited the issue Oct. 28 when its director, James B. Comey, informed Congress that investigators had uncovered additional emails to and from a close Clinton aide, Huma Abedin, on the computer of her estranged husband, Anthony D. Weiner.
Investigators are scouring those emails and have not yet said whether they are pertinent to an inquiry that seemingly ended in July when Comey announced that he would not recommend criminal charges against Clinton or others over their handling of classified information.
The chain released Friday was not marked classified at the time and was sent on the government’s unclassified computer networks. Two of the notes in the chain were “upgraded” by the State Department — on the grounds that they contained information classified at the lowest level, “confidential” — when they were released last October.
Even if the information sent to Clinton’s daughter was not classified at the time, it would be unusual for an exchange among senior administration officials to be forwarded to someone outside the government, even a close relative.
A spokesman for Clinton’s campaign, Brian Fallon, did not immediately respond to questions about the email chain.
Michael Short of the Republican National Committee said in a statement that the email chain to Chelsea Clinton was “a stark reminder” of her mother’s “reckless conduct that jeopardized our national security and sensitive diplomatic efforts.”