WASHINGTON — Two inspectors general have asked the Justice Department to open an investigation into whether sensitive government information was mishandled in connection with the personal email account Hillary Rodham Clinton used as secretary of state, senior government officials said Thursday.
The
request follows an assessment in a June 29 memo by the inspectors
general for the State Department and the intelligence agencies that Mrs.
Clinton’s private account contained “hundreds of potentially classified
emails.” The memo was written to Patrick F. Kennedy, the under
secretary of state for management.
It
is not clear if any of the information in the emails was marked as
classified by the State Department when Mrs. Clinton sent or received
them.
But
since her use of a private email account for official State Department
business was revealed in March, she has repeatedly said that she had no
classified information on the account.
The
Justice Department has not decided if it will open an investigation,
senior officials said. A spokesman for Mrs. Clinton’s campaign released a
statement on Twitter on Friday morning. “Any released emails deemed
classified by the administration have been done so after the fact, and
not at the time they were transmitted,” it read.
At
issue are thousands of pages of State Department emails from Mrs.
Clinton’s private account. Mrs. Clinton has said she used the account
because it was more convenient, but it also shielded her correspondence
from congressional and Freedom of Information Act requests.
She
faced sharp criticism after her use of the account became public, and
subsequently said she would ask the State Department to release her
emails.
The department is now reviewing some 55,000 pages of emails. A first batch of 3,000 pages was made public on June 30.
In
the course of the email review, State Department officials determined
that some information in the messages should be retroactively
classified. In the 3,000 pages that were released, for example, portions
of two dozen emails were redacted because they were upgraded to
“classified status.” But none of those were marked as classified at the
time Mrs. Clinton handled them.
In
a second memo to Mr. Kennedy, sent on July 17, the inspectors general
said that at least one email made public by the State Department
contained classified information. The inspectors general did not
identify the email or reveal its substance.
The memos were provided to The New York Times by a senior government official.
The
inspectors general also criticized the State Department for its
handling of sensitive information, particularly its reliance on retired
senior Foreign Service officers to decide if information should be
classified, and for not consulting with the intelligence agencies about
its determinations.
In
March, Mrs. Clinton insisted that she was careful in her handling of
information on her private account. “I did not email any classified
material to anyone on my email,” she said. “There is no classified
material. So I’m certainly well aware of the classification requirements
and did not send classified material.”
In
May, the F.B.I. asked the State Department to classify a section of
Mrs. Clinton’s emails that related to suspects who may have been
arrested in connection with the 2012 attacks in Benghazi, Libya. The
information was not classified at the time Mrs. Clinton received it.
The
revelations about how Mrs. Clinton handled her email have been an
embarrassment for the State Department, which has been repeatedly
criticized over its handling of documents related to Mrs. Clinton and
her advisers.
On
Monday, a federal judge sharply questioned State Department lawyers at a
hearing in Washington about why they had not responded to Freedom of
Information Act requests from The Associated Press, some of which were
four years old.
“I
want to find out what’s been going on over there — I should say, what’s
not been going on over there,” said Judge Richard J. Leon of United
States District Court, according to a transcript obtained by Politico.
The judge said that “for reasons known only to itself,” the State
Department “has been, to say the least, recalcitrant in responding.”
Two
days later, lawmakers on the Republican-led House committee
investigating the Benghazi attacks said they planned to summon Secretary
of State John Kerry’s chief of staff to Capitol Hill to answer
questions about why the department has not produced documents that the
panel subpoenaed. That hearing is set for next Wednesday.
“The
State Department has used every excuse to avoid complying with
fundamental requests for documents,” said the chairman of the House
committee, Representative Trey Gowdy, Republican of South Carolina.
Mr.
Gowdy said that while the committee has used an array of measures to
try to get the State Department to hand over documents, the results have
been the same. “Our committee is not in possession of all documents
needed to do the work assigned to us,” he said.
The
State Department has sought to delay the hearing, citing continuing
efforts to brief members of Congress on the details of the nuclear
accord with Iran. It is not clear why the State Department has struggled
with the classification issues and document production. Republicans
have said the department is trying to use those processes to protect
Mrs. Clinton.
State
Department officials say they simply do not have the resources or
infrastructure to properly comply with all the requests. Since March,
requests for documents have significantly increased.
Some
State Department officials said they believe that many senior officials
did not initially take the House committee seriously, which slowed
document production and created an appearance of stonewalling.
State
Department officials also said that Mr. Kerry is concerned about the
toll the criticism has had on the department and has urged his deputies
to comply with the requests quickly.
Correction: July 25, 2015
An article and a headline in some editions on Friday about a request to the Justice Department for an investigation regarding Hillary Clinton’s personal email account while she was secretary of state misstated the nature of the request, using information from senior government officials. It addressed the potential compromise of classified information in connection with that email account. It did not specifically request an investigation into Mrs. Clinton.
An article and a headline in some editions on Friday about a request to the Justice Department for an investigation regarding Hillary Clinton’s personal email account while she was secretary of state misstated the nature of the request, using information from senior government officials. It addressed the potential compromise of classified information in connection with that email account. It did not specifically request an investigation into Mrs. Clinton.
Correction: July 26, 2015
An article in some editions on Friday about a request to the Justice Department for an investigation regarding Hillary Clinton’s personal email account while she was secretary of state referred incorrectly, using information from senior government officials, to the request. It was a “security referral,” pertaining to possible mishandling of classified information, officials said, not a “criminal referral.”[source]
An article in some editions on Friday about a request to the Justice Department for an investigation regarding Hillary Clinton’s personal email account while she was secretary of state referred incorrectly, using information from senior government officials, to the request. It was a “security referral,” pertaining to possible mishandling of classified information, officials said, not a “criminal referral.”[source]
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