May 2, 2024, 2:47 pm


FT Online

Published:
2019-09-29 21:00:53 BdST

State Department ratchets up Clinton email probe: report


Donald Trump’s administration is
amping up an investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails, The Washington Post
reported Saturday, breathing new life into a pet issue used by the president
to rail against his opponent during the 2016 elections.

The question of whether Clinton improperly used a private email account
and server while secretary of state led to Trump’s repeat assertion that she
deserved to be put in prison and frequent chants of “lock her up” at his
political rallies.

Following an FBI investigation into the matter, former director James
Comey did not recommend charges against Clinton but did describe her conduct
as “extremely careless.”

In recent weeks, up to 130 officials have been contacted by State
Department investigators concerning emails they sent years ago which have
been retroactively classified, nearly all of which were sent to or eventually
made their way into Clinton’s unsecure email account, the Post reported.

The paper, which cited current and former officials, said State Department
investigators began contacting employees approximately 1.5 years ago, before
the effort trailed off, only to be revived again in August.

“This has nothing to do with who is in the White House,” one senior State
Department official told the Post, speaking on condition of anonymity. “This
is about the time it took to go through millions of emails, which is about
3.5 years.”

Revelation of the renewed effort comes the same week that Democrats in
Congress launched an impeachment investigation into Trump over accusations he
tried to arm-twist the Ukrainian president into providing dirt on one of his
main 2020 election rivals, Joe Biden.

State Department officials deny the renewed email effort has any political
motivation.

However, one former senior US official familiar with the investigation
said it seemed to be a means for Republicans “to keep the Clinton email issue
alive” and represented “a way to tarnish a whole bunch of Democratic foreign
policy people.”

Those who have found their emails swept up in the investigation do not
seem to be at risk of criminal prosecution, however.

Trump’s own handling of classified information has come into repeat
question, such as when he revealed highly classified information on the
Islamic State group to senior Russian officials in an Oval Office meeting in
May 2017.

And in April, a whistleblower told Congress some 25 White House officials
including top advisors of Trump were given security clearances despite staff
recommendations against it.

Clinton has previously chalked up her election defeat to Comey’s brief re-
opening of the FBI investigation into her use of the private email account
and server just days before the 2016 election.

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