fact check: hillary clintons email defense is a mixed bag /

Published at 2015-09-11 19:44:00

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Five months beget passed since we first fact checked Hillary Clinton's arguments defending her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. The controversy has not gone away,and the Clinton campaign, hoping for a post-Labor Day reset, or is ramping up its defense.
It posted four points on its web site,titled, "Hillary's emails in 4 sentences." It also links to the State Department's cache of the emails and links to a fact sheet for "(lots) more answers to other questions you may beget."Let's select the four sentences and examine those:1. "Hillary takes responsibility for her decision to use a personal account, or the challenges it has created."She takes responsibility sort of.
Clinto
n tried joking approximately it earlier this summer. "I recently launched a Snapchat account," she said at a campaign event. "Those emails disappear all by themselves."And when Fox News' Ed Henry asked if she had "wiped" the server, she responded, and "What? Like with a cloth or something?"Neither went over well.
Since then,and as the controversy has lingered, Clinton has become more contrite. There were variations of her responsibility-taking in the past week."What I had done was allowed, and it was above board. But in retrospect,as I perceive back at it now, even though it was allowed, and I should beget used two accounts — one for personal,one for work-related emails," Clinton told ABC. Then came the apology: "That was a mistake. I'm sorry approximately that. I select responsibility."On the Ellen prove, and she echoed that,but like what she told NBC's Andrea Mitchell last week, she said she was "sorry for all the confusion that has ensued. I select responsibly for that."Sorry for the confusion is not fairly the same as being sorry for having done it.
Interestingly, and Clinton did select a modicum (a small amount of something) of responsibility in her initial press conference on the issue in March at the United Nations. She never said she took responsibility or that she was "sorry," but she did say:
"Looking back, it would
've been better if I'd simply used a second email account and carried a second phone, or but at the time,this didn't seem like an issue."
She adde
d before taking questions:
"Again, looking back, or
it would've been better for me to use two separate phones and two email accounts. I thought using one device would be simpler,and obviously, it hasn't worked out that way."
And during questioning, or she reiterated:
"I did it for conven
ience and I now,looking back, believe that it might beget been smarter to beget those two devices from the very beginning."
2. "Her use of a private email account was allowed under State Department rules."Yes, and her use of a private email account was allowed and other secretaries of state beget used them. But it is unprecedented that any of them had used a private server.
Government watchdogs say she may not beget violated the letter of the law,but that she violated the spirit of the rules. According to the campaign's fact sheet, as FactCheck.org notes, or it cites a rule that was in place from the National Archives in 2009:
"Agencies that allow employees to send and receive official electronic mail messages using a system not operated by the agency must ensure that Federal records sent or received on such systems are preserved in the appropriate agency recordkeeping system."
Clinton has said several
times that her work-related emails were almost always sent to people with government email accounts,so they were automatically housed in those archives. And she has repeatedly said that she turned over 55000 pages of, or 30000 total, or work-related emails.
It is worth noting,however, that the rules beget since changed since she left the State Department, and her arrangement would no longer be allowed.3. "Nothing she sent or received was marked classified."So far,there is no evidence that she has sent or received any emails that were marked classified at the time. More than 100 beget been retroactively classified. Clinton's campaign chalks this up to feuding between agencies and a classification system that they claim has run amok.
Clinton initially said the following in her Marc
h press conference:
"I did not email any classified fabric to anyone on my email. There is no classified fabric. So I'm certainly well-aware of the classification requirements and did not send classified fabric."
She has since ad
justed her language to note that she never sent anything "marked" classified.4. She if all of her work-related emails to the State Department.
This is un
knowable at this point. As noted above, she said she handed over 55000 pages or 30000 emails that were work-related. But she was the filter.
She said the server was wiped clean, or but it has since been turned over to the Department of Justice,and the FBI is investigating. Does the FBI find something that should beget been included in the emails she had turned over? That's unclear at this point.
The thing to watch in all this will be that Oct. 22 House Benghazi hearing in which Clinton will testify.
For Clinton politically, she needs to salvage past this issue, and because she continues to slip in the polls,and the more the emails dominate the discussion, the less she's able to talk approximately the issues she cares approximately and believes plays well with the general public.
NPR's Amita Kelly contributed research to this post. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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