Connecting the dots on Hillary Clinton

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[h=1]Clinton Emails Became the New Focus of Benghazi Inquiry[/h] By ERIC LIPTON, NOAM SCHEIBER and MICHAEL S. SCHMIDTOCT. 11, 2015



WASHINGTON — When the House select committee investigating the 2012 attacks on American government outposts in Benghazi, Libya, was created, Democrats immediately criticized it as a partisan effort to damage the political fortunes of Hillary Rodham Clinton.
But Representative Trey Gowdy, the South Carolina Republican and former federal prosecutor who is the committee’s chairman, told Fox News at the time: “I have no friends to reward and no foes to punish. We’re going to go wherever the facts take us.”
Now, 17 months later — longer than the Watergate investigation lasted — interviews with current and former committee staff members as well as internal committee documents reviewed by The New York Times show the extent to which the focus of the committee’s work has shifted from the circumstances surrounding the Benghazi attack to the politically charged issue of Mrs. Clinton’s use of a private email server while she was secretary of state.

A committee with a stated initial goal of learning more about how four Americans, including Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens, were killed in Libya has created a political whirlwind in Washington, affecting not only Mrs. Clinton’s presidential campaign, but now also the race for House speaker. Mrs. Clinton is scheduled to testify in front of the committee on Oct. 22.
The committee has conducted only one of a dozen interviews that Mr. Gowdy said in February he planned to hold with prominent intelligence, Defense Department and White House officials, and it has held none of the nine public hearings — with titles such as “Why Were We in Libya?” — that internal documents show have been proposed.

At the same time, the committee has added at least 18 current and former State Department officials to its roster of witnesses, including three speechwriters and an information technology specialist who maintained Mrs. Clinton’s private email server.
Top Republican aides on the select committee dispute any suggestion that their inquiry, which has already cost more than $4.5 million, has been partisan or ineffective or that it changed course. They say that although seven other congressional committees have already examined the attacks, the select committee has been able to unearth new information on Benghazi because, unlike the other committees, it has a mandate to look across multiple agencies and see the “entire elephant,” as Dana K. Chipman, the select committee’s chief counsel, put it.
The committee’s focus on Mrs. Clinton’s email, a Republican spokesman said, is a required part of the investigation into what happened in Libya. “Secretary Clinton’s unusual email arrangement with herself has only made it more difficult for the committee to ensure the public record with respect to Libya and Benghazi is complete,” the spokesman, Jamal Ware, said in a statement on Sunday.
Republican committee members and staff members said they had interviewed more than 40 people who were never deposed by congressional investigators for other committees — a tally disputed by Democrats.
In an interview last week, Mr. Gowdy defended the committee’s work on Benghazi and said only two of the people interviewed by the committee were related to Mrs. Clinton’s email. He said that at one point this spring he told John A. Boehner, the House speaker, that he feared the task of investigating the email issue would distract from his committee’s work. Now, as the committee prepares to question Mrs. Clinton next week, what Mr. Gowdy feared as a distraction has led to accusations of bias from a former staff member.
Bradley F. Podliska, an Air Force Reserve officer who began working for the Republican staff of the committee in September 2014 but has since been fired, said in an interview that the panel changed its focus this spring, shortly after staff members learned that Mrs. Clinton had exclusively used a private email account as secretary of state, including during the Benghazi attacks. The committee dismissed Major Podliska in June, and he has said he plans to file a complaint in federal court about his termination.
Major Podliska described an odd encounter with one of his bosses in April.

“Keep your head down,” Major Podliska said, recalling what Christopher Donesa, the committee’s deputy staff director, had told him after praising his progress. Mr. Donesa paused for a moment, according to Major Podliska, then added, “This is taking a turn.”
Major Podliska said the committee was becoming focused primarily on the State Department, and in particular on Mrs. Clinton.
Republican staff members said Major Podliska had been dismissed in part because he had demonstrated “improper partiality and animus in his investigative work” toward Mrs. Clinton and had mishandled classified material, which Major Podliska disputes.
But for months, documents and interviews show, the work of the Benghazi committee has been affected by delays and dysfunction.
The process of setting up an electronic system to manage more than 50,000 pages of documents that the committee has assembled is still not complete, meaning that staff members sometimes have to search through boxes to find critical pieces of paper — an almost comical task, staff members said.
They have spent months sparring with Obama administration agencies trying to get documents, eating up time the committee had planned to use investigating the attacks.
With the slow progress, members have engaged in social activities like a wine club nicknamed “Wine Wednesdays,” drinking from glasses imprinted with the words “Glacial Pace,” a dig at Representative Elijah E. Cummings, Democrat of Maryland and the committee’s ranking member, Major Podliska said. Mr. Cummings used the term to question the speed of the committee’s work.

At one point, several Republican staff members formed a gun-buying club and discussed in the committee’s conference room the 9-millimeter Glock handguns they intended to buy and what type of monograms they would inscribe on them, Major Podliska said.
The documents do show that since the March revelations about Mrs. Clinton’s email server, the committee has continued to interview officials outside the State Department. Since then 10 intelligence officials — including C.I.A. operatives who were on the ground in Benghazi — and four from the Department of Defense have been interviewed.
But an approximate tally produced by the Democratic minority staff shows that the committee has so far followed up with only a third of the potential witnesses from the intelligence community, none of the six from the White House and fewer than half from the Defense Department. Meanwhile, more than 70 percent of the potential witnesses from the State Department have been interviewed.
Mr. Ware said the focus on the State Department made sense, regardless of Mrs. Clinton, because it was where the most relevant witnesses worked.
Mr. Gowdy said in the interview last week that he had pressed Mr. Boehner to have another House committee examine the matter of Mrs. Clinton’s emails, but that Mr. Boehner had rejected the request.

“I would have liked nothing more than for the speaker to find another committee,” Mr. Gowdy said.
Senior Republican officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were discussing confidential conversations, said that Mr. Boehner had long been suspicious of the administration’s handling of the attacks and that Mrs. Clinton’s emails gave him a way to keep the issue alive and to cause political problems for her campaign. But he thought that the task was too delicate to entrust to others and that it should remain with Mr. Gowdy, the former prosecutor.

Late last month, preserving the investigation’s credibility became more difficult when Representative Kevin McCarthy, the House majority leader, inadvertently offered corroboration of Democrats’ suspicions.

“Everybody thought Hillary Clinton was unbeatable, right?” he said on Fox News. “But we put together a Benghazi special committee, a select committee. What are her numbers today? Her numbers are dropping.” Mr. McCarthy subsequently withdrew his candidacy for House speaker, citing in part the uproar over those comments.
Representative Adam B. Schiff, a California Democrat and a member of the Benghazi committee, effectively agreed with Mr. McCarthy’s assessment. He has called for the committee to disband.

“Clearly, the committee’s true interest was not in providing new answers or information about the Benghazi attacks, but in damaging Secretary Clinton,” Mr. Schiff said.
Democrats and Republicans who remember the Watergate and Whitewater investigations have said this is not the first time that a committee started off focusing on one issue and ended up looking at another.

Committee Created
The Select Committee on the Events Surrounding the 2012 Terrorist Attack in Benghazi, Libya — as the panel is officially known — was created in May 2014 by a bitterly divided House of Representatives, based on an almost entirely party-line vote.
Mrs. Clinton had already taken responsibility for the attacks. Previous congressional investigations into Benghazi had already concluded that State Department officials had erred in not better securing the diplomatic compound amid reports of a deteriorating security situation. The investigations also concluded that the attacks had come with little warning and that it would have been difficult to intervene once they began. The investigations generally agree that the administration’s postattack talking points — a matter of much dispute — were flawed but not deliberately misleading.
Democrats began blasting the new effort even before Mr. Boehner named the seven Republican members of the 12-member panel.
“Let’s call this what it is — it is nothing more than a political ploy,” Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Democrat of Florida and the chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, told reporters in early May 2014, while Democrats were still debating whether to even fill their five seats on the panel.
The Republicans moved to defuse these criticisms by naming Mr. Chipman as their chief counsel. He is a graduate of West Point and Stanford Law School who served as the Army’s judge advocate general, or the commanding officer of its in-house lawyers.
Mr. Chipman began the investigation with a commitment to stay focused on the front-line personnel who were in Benghazi before and during the attacks.
“These are people I served with for 10 years,” Mr. Chipman said in an interview, referring to his work in the Army overseeing military intelligence teams. “That is what brought me to this committee — finding out what happened with these guys.”
Specifically, the majority staff members said, they wanted to test claims that there was little the Defense Department could have done on the day of attacks to have saved the lives of the four Americans. They also wanted to re-examine how the administration had handled the aftermath of the attacks, including how quickly intelligence reports from Benghazi reached top administration officials.
The investigation was initially organized into three “tranches” — one for events before the attacks, one for the attacks themselves and one for events after. In December, in an early sign of bipartisanship, Democratic and Republican staff members traveled to a Marine base in Quantico, Va., where the committee received briefings on how Defense Department personnel handle security at American embassies and other overseas facilities. They also met with families of the victims of the attacks.
The staff members, including Major Podliska, began interviews with officials from the Department of Defense, the State Department and the intelligence community. Mr. Chipman said they wanted to learn: “How did the U.S. government respond to people in distress? What did they say about what had occurred? And how did they craft the subsequent narrative, perhaps for political reasons, and is that narrative accurate?”
At the end of 2014, the committee Republicans announced an ambitious agenda, including the nine proposed public hearings from January through October with tentative titles such as “What Happened?” and “What Should We Fix?”
Still, Democrats questioned how much new was being learned. They pointed out that many of these interviews were focused on conditions in Libya in 2011, before Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, the Libyan dictator, was killed and the situation there changed radically.

“None of the committee’s new interview subjects has substantiated any of the wild claims Republicans have been making,” Mr. Cummings said.
Email Account
The committee first noticed something unusual in Mrs. Clinton’s emails in August 2014, when documents the State Department was handing over showed that she had been using a personal account. The staff members assumed that it was only a matter of time before they would see correspondence from her government account.
This February, the State Department gave the committee 300 of Mrs. Clinton’s emails. That month, in what one committee member described as a “very tense” meeting, State Department officials acknowledged that Mrs. Clinton had not had a government account. She had used her private email for all of her official business, leaving open the possibility that her account contained classified information. (Having classified information outside a secure government account is illegal.)
Things changed for the Benghazi committee on March 2, after The New York Times broke the story of Mrs. Clinton’s email account. There was a growing sense of opportunity within the committee that this could be a lifeline.

“The committee became relevant again,” Major Podliska said. “There was a renewed vigor in the investigation.”
Major Podliska happened to be called to active duty just at that critical moment; he was sent to Germany for two weeks in March. When he returned, he said, he discovered that the committee’s three-tranche structure had collapsed into a single “agency-centric” investigation, as it was known internally.
As a practical matter, the focus was overwhelmingly on one agency. “The reality was it was the State Department,” Major Podliska said.
In the spring and summer, the committee drew up new lists of targets for interviews that to Major Podliska and other committee staff members, particularly Democrats, seemed to have little to do with Benghazi.

Among the targets were Bryan Pagliano, a State Department aide who helped set up Mrs. Clinton’s email system, and Sidney Blumenthal, a friend and informal adviser to Mrs. Clinton who had sent emails to her about Libya before and after the attacks.
The questioning of Mr. Blumenthal and others, in sessions that took place in a closed-door conference room and frequently lasted seven or eight hours, also ranged far afield of Benghazi.
During one daylong session, Mr. Blumenthal was asked more than 160 questions about his relationship and communications with the Clinton family, according to a count by Democratic staff members based on an interview transcript. That included more than 50 questions about the Clinton Foundation and more than 45 questions related to David Brock, who runs a group that defends Mrs. Clinton against political attacks.
The count by the Democratic staff members shows that the committee also asked Mr. Blumenthal more than 270 questions related to his business activities in Libya. He was helping a private businessman pursue deals there. The committee asked him fewer than 20 questions about the Benghazi attacks.

Mr. Blumenthal declined to comment on Sunday.
Mr. Gowdy has defended these questions, saying Mr. Blumenthal’s for-profit business pursuits in Libya “show an individual who tried to heavily influence the secretary of state to intervene in Libya” militarily and suggesting that this intervention contributed to the September 2012 attacks, a claim the Democrats dismiss.

Republicans also point out that Mr. Blumenthal was being paid by the Clinton Foundation and Mr. Brock’s nonprofit group, and they say roughly half of all the emails sent to Mrs. Clinton related to Benghazi and Libya before the attacks had involved Mr. Blumenthal.
“The content of these emails are quite remarkable,” Mr. Gowdy said in a letter he sent to Democrats last week.
The committee obtained 1,500 more emails from Mrs. Clinton just last month — proof, he said, that critical materials had emerged because of the committee’s efforts.
But even as these new materials came in, the committee put aside all of its proposed public hearings focused on the attack and never followed up on most of its announced witness interviews with top Defense Department and intelligence officials.
Mr. Gowdy said the hearings had been canceled because of objections from intelligence officials about discussing the matters in a public setting.
Republican staff members and Mr. Gowdy said they were confident they had made important progress in understanding what happened in Benghazi.
Tentative findings, they said, include new details that might undercut Defense Department assertions that nothing could have been done in time to save Mr. Stevens and the others. They added that those details would be made public at the end of the inquiry.
Now, with her testimony before the committee imminent, Mrs. Clinton has turned its work to her favor. Only days after Mr. McCarthy’s assertion that the committee succeeded in driving down her poll numbers, her campaign had a TV spot attacking it.
 

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Benghazi Committee gets cease-and-desist letter, 10/12/15, 4:23 PM ET
[h=1]Exclusive: Ex-Benghazi investigator alleges Rep. Gowdy violated federal law[/h] 10/12/15 03:58 PM—Updated 10/13/15 12:07 AM



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By Ari Melber
The legal battle between the House Select Committee on Benghazi and its former investigator, Brad Podliska, escalated Monday afternoon, when Podliska’s lawyers alleged that Chairman Trey Gowdy violated government confidentiality rules and federal law in responding to allegations made by Podliska.

“Both Representative Gowdy and the committee have clearly violated terms of the confidentiality agreement and the Congressional Accountability Act,” said Peter Romer-Friedman, one of Podliska’s attorneys, to MSNBC on Monday afternoon.
The lawyers allege that Gowdy and the committee improperly released confidential information regarding an employment dispute with Podliska, in an effort to discredit him.

“The ludicrousness of a former employee who has spread himself across the news media over the weekend complaining about confidentiality ought to be obvious,” a Benghazi Committee spokesperson told NBC News’ Luke Russert on Monday. “The Committee will vigorously defend itself against these and any other false claims and has nothing further to add at this time.”
The skirmish began over the weekend when Podliska alleged publicly that the committee improperly targeted Hillary Clinton in an effort to damage her politically. A draft of a lawsuit to be filed by Podliska claimed he was fired in part because he refused to go along with the anti-Clinton effort, and also in retaliation for him leaving the committee on Reserve Air Force duties.
Gowdy has categorically denied Podliska’s allegations that he was fired for refusing to go after Clinton. Gowdy has said Podliska was actually terminated for his own errors on the job, including the mishandling of classified information.
At issue in the new claims made Monday by Podliska’s lawyers are critical comments leveled by Gowdy about Podliska over the weekend, in response to the ex-staffer’s charge that the committee improperly targeted Clinton. Gowdy, the Benghazi committee chairman, told NBC News’ Kristin Welker that Podliska was a “lousy employee” who mishandled classified information, and that his criticism of the committee’s focus on Hillary Clinton only arose when he “was losing in mediation on his reservist claim.” That referred to Podliska’s claim that the committee retaliated against him for leaving the country to serve in the Air Force Reserves.
Podliska’s lawyers also point to stories in Politico and The Washington Post as examples of information that they say must have come from the committee. Politico published internal committee emails Podliska sent to colleagues while employed there.
“The only way, in our view, that those docs and the information Gowdy shared could be made public is through the majority staff of the committee or Chairman Gowdy,” they told MSNBC.
They say they are issuing a formal cease-and-desist letter to Gowdy, demanding he stop making statements or releasing information that may violate confidentiality rules for disputes with former congressional staff. They cite a federal law stating that counseling for employee disputes must remain “strictly confidential.”
The letter, first obtained by MSNBC, charges that Gowdy has been “describing private settlement discussions between the parties that must be treated as confidential under the Congressional Accountability Act, and surely Chairman Gowdy, as a lawyer, knows that he is not permitted to publicly disclose private settlement discussions.”

“Aside from the deliberate falsity of those characterizations,” the letter continues, “both you and your clients know that the public disclosures made by Chairman Gowdy and the Benghazi Committee clearly violate both the Congressional Accountability Act and the Mediation and Confidentiality Agreement that you both signed.”
The letter, from Podliska’s three attorneys, is addressed to the House Employment Counsel’s office. A cease-and-desist letter does not bind the recipient in any legal way, but provides a formal attempt to put a party on notice of allegedly improper or illegal acts.




10/12/15, 9:21 AM ET
[h=3]Fmr. investigator sues House Benghazi Committee[/h]
Podliska’s charge that the committee was aimed at damaging Hillary Clinton, the frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination, came as Democrats have increasingly been making the same claim. They’ve been bolstered by comments made earlier this month by House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, which linked the committee’s existence to Clinton’s falling poll numbers. Clinton is set to appear before the committee October 22. Romer-Friedman also said Gowdy falsely claimed he had never met Podliska. In fact, Podliska says, they met on two occasions during committee work.

“His view is that Chairman Gowdy’s statement that they never met is false, because at least two times they were in a room together where he briefed Chairman Gowdy,” said Romer-Friedman.
Podliska expressed surprise that the chairman claimed not to know him, Romer-Friedman added, given the two briefings and the “modest size” of the committee’s staff.
Podliska has yet to file a legal complaint, and his charges consist of one side of a hotly contested factual and legal dispute. His legal team’s swift and assertive responses to Gowdy, however, suggest their client is ready to make his case in the court of public opinion long before his suit makes its way to court.
 

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endless stonewalling
blocking witnesses from testifying
missing documents
"it's a political witch hunt against poor Hillary"
cease and desist letters

Anything and everything to prevent the truth from coming out.

“So far they have treated me like dirt and have not told me anything” - Benghazi family member

:madasshol
 

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[h=1]AP Exclusive: Clinton server's software had hacking risk[/h]
WASHINGTON (AP) — The private email server running in Hillary Rodham Clinton's home basement when she was secretary of state was connected to the Internet in ways that made it more vulnerable to hackers, according to data and documents reviewed by The Associated Press.
Clinton's server, which handled her personal and State Department correspondence, appeared to allow users to connect openly over the Internet to control it remotely, according to detailed records compiled in 2012. Experts said the Microsoft remote desktop service wasn't intended for such use without additional protective measures, and was the subject of U.S. government and industry warnings at the time over attacks from even low-skilled intruders.
Records show that Clinton additionally operated two more devices on her home network in Chappaqua, New York, that also were directly accessible from the Internet. One contained similar remote-control software that also has suffered from security vulnerabilities, known as Virtual Network Computing, and the other appeared to be configured to run websites.
 

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These people are so corrupt it is sickening:

[h=1]While at State, Clinton chief of staff held job negotiating with Abu Dhabi[/h]
During her first four months at the State Department, Mills also held another high-profile job: She worked part time at New York University, negotiating with officials in Abu Dhabi to build a campus in that Persian Gulf city.

At the State Department, she was unpaid in those first months, officially designated as a temporary expert-consultant — a status that allowed her to continue to collect outside income while serving as chief of staff. She reported that NYU paid her $198,000 in 2009, when her university work overlapped with her time at the State Department, and that she collected an additional $330,000 in vacation and severance payments when she left the school’s payroll in May 2009.

The arrangement, which Mills discussed publicly for the first time in an interview with The Washington Post, is another example of how Clinton as secretary allowed close aides to conduct their public work even as they performed jobs benefiting private interests. Another key Clinton aide, Huma Abedin, spent her last six months as Clinton’s deputy chief of staff in 2012 simultaneously employed by the Clinton Foundation, the family’s global charity, and a consulting company with close Clinton connections. Similarly, Mills remained on the Clinton Foundation’s unpaid board for a short time after joining the State Department.

When asked whether a State Department ethics officer had reviewed the specifics of her work on the Abu Dhabi project, she did not directly answer.

This is exceedingly unusual, perhaps exceptional in the history of modern federal bureaucratic leadership. I’ve never seen it before,” said Paul C. Light, an NYU professor who has studied government employment in depth for decades and is a former head of the Center for Public Service at the Brookings Institution.
 

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[h=1]CYBER-SECURITY EXPERTS: HILLARY CLINTON MAIL SERVER WAS ‘TOTAL AMATEUR HOUR’[/h]
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REUTERS/David Becker

by JOHN HAYWARD13 Oct 2015310

[h=2]The Associated Press is exposing the security flaws in Hillary Clinton’s email setup, and it’s devastating. Some of the details they amassed have been known or suspected since early in the scandal, but seeing them all together, with some new details, paints a picture of hair-raising reckless vulnerability.[/h]One cyber-security expert quoted in the piece described Clinton’s server as “total amateur hour.”
The big news comes right up front:
Clinton’s server, which handled her personal and State Department correspondence,appeared to allow users to connect openly over the Internet to control it remotely, according to detailed records compiled in 2012. Experts said the Microsoft remote desktop service wasn’t intended for such use without additional protective measures, and was the subject of U.S. government and industry warnings at the time over attacks from even low-skilled intruders.
Records show that Clinton additionally operated two more devices on her home network in Chappaqua, New York, that also were directly accessible from the Internet. One contained similar remote-control software that also has suffered from security vulnerabilities, known as Virtual Network Computing, and the other appeared to be configured to run websites.
Good Lord. Closing off Remote Desktop access is Security 101 stuff. If zero-day exploits were drunken party guests, even “Dead Broke” Clinton’s vast estate in Chappaqua wouldn’t have enough bedrooms to put them all up for the night.
The AP exclusively reviewed numerous records from an Internet “census” by an anonymous hacker-researcher, who three years ago used unsecured devices to scan hundreds of millions of Internet Protocol addresses for accessible doors, called “ports.” Using a computer in Serbia, the hacker scanned Clinton’s basement server in Chappaqua at least twice, in August and December 2012. It was unclear whether the hacker was aware the server belonged to Clinton, although it identified itself as providing email services for clintonemail.com. The results are widely available online.
Remote-access software allows users to control another computer from afar. The programs are usually operated through an encrypted connection — called a virtual private network, or VPN. But Clinton’s system appeared to accept commands directly from the Internet without such protections.
“That’s total amateur hour,” said Marc Maiffret, who has founded two cyber security companies. He said permitting remote-access connections directly over the Internet would be the result of someone choosing convenience over security or failing to understand the risks. “Real enterprise-class security, with teams dedicated to these things, would not do this,” he said.
The government and security firms have published warnings about allowing this kind of remote access to Clinton’s server. The same software was targeted by an infectious Internet worm, known as Morta, which exploited weak passwords to break into servers. The software also was known to be vulnerable to brute-force attacks that tried password combinations until hackers broke in, and in some cases it could be tricked into revealing sensitive details about a server to help hackers formulate attacks.
“An attacker with a low skill level would be able to exploit this vulnerability,” said the Homeland Security Department’s U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team in 2012, the same year Clinton’s server was scanned.
But Hillary thought it was good enough for a Cabinet secretary’s server, which ended up improperly handling classified and Top Secret information. The AP notes for the record that remote-access connections are banned on official State Department systems.
Several other security experts are quoted in the article expressing astonishment that such basic network security principles were ignored. Alas, we may never have the answer to the question professionals always ask when confronted with an amateur-hour performance – what were they THINKING? – because the amateurs refuse to answer questions. Clinton’s IT adviser, Bryan Pagliano, pled the Fifth to avoid discussing her server. When was the last time you heard about a computer tech invoking his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination to avoid answering reasonable questions about his work?
As for the proprietor of this shaky server, she’s taken to shrieking about Vast Right Wing Conspiracies and the House Benghazi Committee every time she’s asked about cyber-security. I wouldn’t hold my breath waiting for the CNN debate anchors on Tuesday night to hit Hillary Clinton the way they would hit a Republican, by asking a bunch of technical questions about her server and forcing her to stammer out the admission that she doesn’t understand the nuances of computer security. The devastating follow-up would then be, “In that case, Republican Candidate, why did you take it upon yourself to ignore State Department regulations, wave aside the concerns of government security specialists, and set up your own mail server?”
Fortunately, Democrats don’t have to worry about such things, so for the moment Team Clinton’s rhetorical Band-Aid – claiming there’s no proof her server actually was hacked – is holding, barely. That’s a silly evasion, because getting lucky and escaping the attention of hackers wouldn’t let Clinton off the hook for putting U.S. national security at risk.
Also, the kind of exploits her server was vulnerable to are precisely the sort that allow hacking with minimal traces of the intruder’s presence. Most of the big hacking capers making the headlines involved intruders who went undetected for months or years, in systems vastly better secured and maintained than Hillary Clinton’s. Foreign intelligence services take pains to keep secrets they have pilfered, and their methods, quiet for as long as possible, since stolen information loses much of its value once the target becomes aware of the theft.
The AP’s review makes it clear hackers were aware of Clinton’s email system – which the SecState and her crack cyber squad helpfully named “clintonemail.com,” so the hackers knew exactly what they were looking at – so it would be a minor miracle if none of those Amateur Hour vulnerabilities were exploited.
 

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Second GOP Congressman Admits Benghazi Committee Is All About Hillary Clinton

"Sometimes the biggest sin you can commit in D.C. is to tell the truth."

Marina Fang Associate Politics Editor, The Huffington Post

Posted: 10/14/2015 09:47 PM EDT
A second congressman admitted on Wednesday that the Republican House committee created to investigate the 2012 terrorist attack in Benghazi, Libya, is solely "designed to go after" Hillary Clinton.
“This may not be politically correct, but I think that there was a big part of this investigation that was designed to go after people and an individual, Hillary Clinton,” Rep. Richard Hanna (R-N.Y.) said on a morning radio show in upstate New York.
Republicans say they formed the House Select Committee on Benghazi to investigate the attack. Democrats have complained that the committee, which has cost taxpayers about $4.5 million during its 17 months of existence, was primarily a political stunt.
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) last month let it slip that the committee aimed to sink Clinton's poll numbers. His gaffe reverberated across Capitol Hill and was a major factor in McCarthy's abrupt decision to drop out of the race to replace outgoing House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio).
McCarthy later walked back his comments, claiming he misspoke.
But on Wednesday, Hanna suggested that McCarthy was being truthful.
"Sometimes the biggest sin you can commit in D.C. is to tell the truth," Hanna said.
Clinton, who has repeatedly said she is cooperating with the committee's investigation, is set to testify next week.
On Sunday, a former committee staffer alleged that the chairman, Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.), fired him for not focusing the probe on Clinton and the State Department.
Clinton's campaign on Wednesday held up Hanna's comments as further proof that the committee has "zero credibility."
"House Republicans aren't even shy anymore about admitting that the Benghazi Committee is a partisan farce," campaign spokesman Brian Fallon said in a statement. "After failing to produce any new information on the tragic 2012 attacks at Benghazi despite a 17-month investigation, John Boehner has reportedly urged the committee to shift its focus to Hillary Clinton's emails in an ongoing effort to try to hurt her politically. Hillary Clinton will still attend next week's hearing, but at this point, Trey Gowdy's inquiry has zero credibility left."
 

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Second GOP Congressman Admits Benghazi Committee Is All About Hillary Clinton

"Sometimes the biggest sin you can commit in D.C. is to tell the truth."

Marina Fang Associate Politics Editor, The Huffington Post

Posted: 10/14/2015 09:47 PM EDT
A second congressman admitted on Wednesday that the Republican House committee created to investigate the 2012 terrorist attack in Benghazi, Libya, is solely "designed to go after" Hillary Clinton.
“This may not be politically correct, but I think that there was a big part of this investigation that was designed to go after people and an individual, Hillary Clinton,” Rep. Richard Hanna (R-N.Y.) said on a morning radio show in upstate New York.
Republicans say they formed the House Select Committee on Benghazi to investigate the attack. Democrats have complained that the committee, which has cost taxpayers about $4.5 million during its 17 months of existence, was primarily a political stunt.
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) last month let it slip that the committee aimed to sink Clinton's poll numbers. His gaffe reverberated across Capitol Hill and was a major factor in McCarthy's abrupt decision to drop out of the race to replace outgoing House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio).
McCarthy later walked back his comments, claiming he misspoke.
But on Wednesday, Hanna suggested that McCarthy was being truthful.
"Sometimes the biggest sin you can commit in D.C. is to tell the truth," Hanna said.
Clinton, who has repeatedly said she is cooperating with the committee's investigation, is set to testify next week.
On Sunday, a former committee staffer alleged that the chairman, Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.), fired him for not focusing the probe on Clinton and the State Department.
Clinton's campaign on Wednesday held up Hanna's comments as further proof that the committee has "zero credibility."
"House Republicans aren't even shy anymore about admitting that the Benghazi Committee is a partisan farce," campaign spokesman Brian Fallon said in a statement. "After failing to produce any new information on the tragic 2012 attacks at Benghazi despite a 17-month investigation, John Boehner has reportedly urged the committee to shift its focus to Hillary Clinton's emails in an ongoing effort to try to hurt her politically. Hillary Clinton will still attend next week's hearing, but at this point, Trey Gowdy's inquiry has zero credibility left."

I thought Trey Gowdy was gonna get to the bottom of this? That's what sheriff Joe and Russ told me???
 

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I thought Trey Gowdy was gonna get to the bottom of this? That's what sheriff Joe and Russ told me???

Trey and the rest are at The Bottom alright. I told these maroons way back when this farce committee was announced, that Benghazi and any mention of it would only help Hiillary come election time. If these idiots would only listen to normal people, instead of their self perpetuating bubble, maybe they'd get somewhere.
 

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Trey and the rest are at The Bottom alright. I told these maroons way back when this farce committee was announced, that Benghazi and any mention of it would only help Hiillary come election time. If these idiots would only listen to normal people, instead of their self perpetuating bubble, maybe they'd get somewhere.

The Russ's and Joe's of the world can't figure out why their right wing message always gets rejected.....they just can't figure it out.
 

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Investigation into Hillary's email server focuses on Espionage Act and could get her 10 years in jail as FBI agent says she could be prosecuted just for failing to tell Obama


  • Federal law makes it a crime for security clearance holders to fail to tell superiors when 'gross negligence' causes a security breach
  • FBI agent tells DailyMail.com about Hillary Clinton: 'The secretary's superior is the President of the United States'
  • 'So unless he were aware of what she was doing when she was doing it, it seems there could be a legal problem [for her]'
  • Obama was asked Sunday on '60 Minutes' if he knew at the time that Clinton was running a home-brew email server; he replied, 'No'
  • More on Hillary Clinton's email scandal at www.dailymail.co.uk/hillary

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ed-just-failing-tell-Obama.html#ixzz3olhzm1MC
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

hillary%2B_for_prison.jpg
 

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"You know who continues" to "guess." lol Benghazi investigation deserves to be dealt with. The Dem's can't deal with anything much less something that directly ties to their leading presidential candidate. Just start with blaming a video that nobody ever watched. Hillary and the WH talked the night of the attack and both stuck with the video. That alone opens the door but in Hillary's case it was just another lie. Many have been interviewed by this committee and once Hillary appears many more will. The State Dept has been slow providing documents etc and of course Hillary destroying her email after being called to appear before the committee would only raise the suspicions of Republicans. The article Guessor posted said that Hillary has been cooperating with the committee.....really. So in Guesser logic the Republican committee is guilty of whatever but Hillary should get a pass mainly because she is the leading Dem candidate. Ask the families of the 4 killed during Benghazi how political correctness plays into this one, absurd. How "at this point and time" any open minded person who cannot see Hillary for what she really is obviously looking at doing whatever it takes to win the next election. That takes precedence over investigating what should be investigated by Republicans and would never be investigated by Democrats.
 

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[h=2]FBI Examining Whether Hillary Clinton Email Violated Espionage Act[/h]Investigators focusing on ‘gross negligence’ subsection
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Hillary Rodham Clinton / AP


BY: Morgan Chalfant
October 16, 2015 4:23 pm


FBI investigators probing Hillary Clinton’s personal email are zeroing in on whether a subsection of the Espionage Act related to “gross negligence” in the keeping of national defense information was violated, according to an intelligence community source.
Fox News reported:
Under 18 USC 793 subsection F, the information does not have to be classified to count as a violation. The intelligence source, who spoke on the condition of anonymity citing the sensitivity of the ongoing probe, said the subsection requires the “lawful possession” of national defense information by a security clearance holder who “through gross negligence,” such as the use of an unsecure computer network, permits the material to be removed or abstracted from its proper, secure location. Subsection F also requires the clearance holder “to make prompt report of such loss, theft, abstraction, or destruction to his superior officer.” A failure to do so “shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both.”
The news comes nearly two months after an investigator for public interest law group Judicial Watch told the Washington Free Beacon that Clinton and aides Huma Abedin and Cheryl Mills appeared to have violated 18 USC 793.
Moreover, according to the intelligence source, FBI investigators are also examining whether there has been any obstruction of justice related to the Clinton email probe.
“If someone knows there is an ongoing investigation and takes action to impede an investigation, for example destruction of documents or threatening of witnesses, that could be a separate charge but still remain under a single case,” the source said.
Clinton handed about 30,000 work-related emails over to the State Department after deleting about an equal number of emails she deemed personal from her system.
The FBI seized Clinton’s personal server after the inspector general of the intelligence community determined that at least two emails contained on her private system included top secret information at the time they were sent. Clinton has insisted that she never sent nor received information marked classified.

 

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[h=1]HILLARY DODGES ON WHETHER SERVER HAD SAFEGUARDS TO PREVENT HACKING[/h]
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by IAN HANCHETT17 Oct 2015428

Democratic presidential candidate former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton refused to answer whether there were any safeguards to prevent her server from being hacked in an interview with the Boston Globe‘s James Pindell released on Friday.
Hillary was asked, “One question about your email server, what safeguards did you put in place to make sure that you weren’t hacked?”
She responded, “Well, I can only tell there is no evidence that I’m aware of that I ever was.”
 

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[h=1]EXCLUSIVE: MIKE HUCKABEE CALLS FOR SPECIAL PROSECUTOR FOR HILLARY EMAIL SCANDAL[/h]
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mike-huckabee-hillary-clinton-AP-640x480.jpg
AP Photo/Denis Poroy/Morry Gash

by PATRICK HOWLEY16 Oct 2015975

[h=2]Republican presidential candidate Gov. Mike Huckabee is calling for the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the Hillary Clinton email scandal.[/h]Following a report that President Obama angered FBI investigators by weighing in on Clinton’s conduct in the case, Huckabee said that the Obama administration has lost the ability to impartially conduct an investigation.
“Trusting Hillary Clinton to just ‘come clean’ is like trusting a compulsive gambler in a Vegas casino,” Huckabee told Breitbart News Friday. “The American people are sick of games, endless excuses, and political platitudes—and it’s time we appoint a special prosecutor to investigate this serious national security email scandal.”
“Washington is out-of-control because there’s one set of rules for political insiders and elites, and there’s an entirely separate set of standards for outsiders and ordinary citizens. In America, no one is above the law—not a Senator, not a President, and certainly not the Secretary of State,” Huckabee added.
The New York Times reported Friday that investigators are upset with Obama for weighing in on the pending investigation in a recent television appearance.
“I don’t think it posed a national security problem,” Obama said in a 60 Minutes interview. “This is not a situation in which America’s national security was endangered.”
A special prosecutor was appointed during the Clinton administration to work the Whitewater scandal case. Thus far, Huckabee is the only Republican contender to call for a special prosecutor to investigate Hillary Clinton’s emails.
An independent special prosecutor can be appointed by the Attorney General. Assuming that Obama Attorney General Loretta Lynch will not take this step, Congress can compel her to do so with a majority vote in the U.S. House of Representatives.
 

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[h=2]Emails: Clinton Foundation Donor Lobbied State Department for Haiti Hotels[/h]Foundation donor emailed State Department Chief of Staff Cheryl Mills
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The construction site of the Marriott hotel in Port-au-Prince, Haiti / AP


BY: Alana Goodman
October 19, 2015 5:00 am


A donor to the Clinton Foundation reached out to Hillary Clinton’s office to promote a Haiti hotel project that later received support from the U.S. government and Bill Clinton, according to emails released by the Department of State.
Richard L. Friedman, a Boston hotel developer emailed Cheryl Mills, Clinton’s chief of staff, to tout the project on May 17, 2011.
“We had a good meeting with Jean-Louis, Marriott executives, [the Overseas Private Investment Corporation], etc regarding building hotels in Haiti—I am pursuing this vigorously and hope to be able to develop 2 to 3 hotels with Marriott as manager,” wrote Friedman. “I am talking with Commerce and Export/Import Bank today.”
Friedman said he recently had a discussion with Hillary Clinton at the White House and asked Mills to forward her a note for him. It is unclear what he and Clinton discussed, and portions of his email have been redacted by the State Department due to “personal private interests.” The note he asked Mills to send to Clinton is also redacted.
“I will keep you informed about our progress in Haiti—we are going to need all the help we can get,” Friedman wrote Mills.
Mills forwarded Friedman’s full email to Clinton and her scheduler, Lona Valmoro, on June 7 with the note “See highlight—resending.” The copy released by the State Department does not indicate which portion of the email Mills highlighted.
Friedman contributed between $1,000 and $5,000 to the Clinton Foundation and gave $2,300 to Clinton’s presidential campaign in 2008, records show.
He is not the only Clinton donor associated with Marriott’s efforts in Haiti. The company Digicel Group teamed up with Marriott International in 2011 in Port-au-Prince to build a luxury hotel, which opened earlier this year.
Digicel has contributed between $25,000 and $50,000 to the Clinton Foundation, and its owner, the Irish billionaire Denis O’Brien, has donated between $5 million and $10 million. Unigestion Holdings, a subsidiary of Digicel that was reportedly tasked with managing the hotel project, gave between $10,000 and $25,000.
Marriott International is also a hefty donor to the Clinton Foundation, contributing between $50,000 and $100,000.
According to a Marriott press release on Nov. 28, 2011, the Clinton Foundation helped arrange the partnership between the hotel group and Digicel.
The Port-au-Prince hotel project continued to work closely with the Clinton Foundation during the construction process. The foundation said on its website that it was “pleased to help facilitate the groundbreaking of the new $45 million dollar Marriott/Digicel hotel,” which opened last March.
Bill Clinton attended the hotel’s opening, where he thanked Marriott for “giving all of you the chance to show the real Haiti to the world that will come to this hotel.”
Marriott has received support for its hotel projects from the U.S. government and affiliated international donor groups. In 2012, the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, a U.S. government entity whose budget is linked to the State Department, pledged to provide long-term loans of up to $200 million to help finance Marriott International “environmentally-sustainable” hotel construction in “emerging markets” in the Middle East, Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean.
The International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank Group whose U.S. funding is also linked to the State Department appropriations, provided $26.5 million in financing to help construct the Port-au-Prince Marriott in 2013.
The luxury accommodations are Haiti’s “first internationally branded hotel,” according to the Clinton Foundation website.
Marriott announced earlier this month that it plans to open 60 additional hotels in the Caribbean and Latin America by 2018.
Watchdogs said the lack of transparency in this matter is unacceptable.
“Wherever government money or support tied to the State Department is directed to a project in Haiti involving a major donor to the Clinton Foundation, the public is entitled to full transparency,” said Ken Boehm, chairman of the National Legal and Policy Center, a government watchdog group.

 

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