- Judicial Watch Begins Discovery in Clinton Email Matter
- Judicial Watch Seeks Hillary Clinton Testimony
- Pakistani with Fake Ecuadorean Passport Enters U.S. via Mexico Multiple Times
Judicial Watch Begins Discovery in Clinton Email Matter
Our investigation of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s email system entered a significant new phase this week.
Their testimony is about the creation and operation of Clinton’s non-government email system. The first witness, Lewis A. Lukens, a deputy assistant secretary, was deposed on May 18. I can’t say much about the testimony at this point, other than to tell you that it was not helpful to either Mrs. Clinton or the Obama State Department.
U.S. District Court Judge Emmet G. Sullivan set this historic evidence gathering in motion. Judge Sullivan granted us “discovery” into Clinton’s email system, noting that “based on information learned during discovery, the deposition of Mrs. Clinton may be necessary.”
The depositions are part of our Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit that seeks records about the controversial employment status of Huma Abedin, former Deputy Chief of Staff to Clinton. The lawsuit, which seeks records regarding the authorization for Abedin to engage in outside employment (the Clinton Foundation and other Clinton, Inc. entities) while employed by the Department of State, was reopened because of revelations about the clintonemail.com system (Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:13-cv-01363)).
We have permission from the court to question these individuals for as long as seven hours:
May 18 – Lewis A. Lukens,
deputy assistant secretary of state and executive director of the State
Department’s Executive Secretariat from 2008 to 2011, who emailed with
Patrick Kennedy and Cheryl Mills about setting up a computer for Clinton
to check her clintonemail.com email account. (This testimony took a little over two hours.)
May 27 – Cheryl D. Mills, Clinton’s chief of staff throughout her four years as secretary of state.
June 3 – Stephen D. Mull,
executive secretary of the State Department from June 2009 to October
2012, who suggested that Clinton be issued a State Department
BlackBerry, which would protect her identity and would also be subject
to FOIA requests.
June 6 – Bryan Pagliano, State Department Schedule C employee who has been reported to have serviced and maintained the server that hosted the “clintonemail.com” system during Clinton’s tenure as secretary of state.
June 8
– 30(b)(6) deposition(s) of the State Department regarding the
processing of FOIA requests, including Judicial Watch’s FOIA request,
for emails of Clinton and Abedin both during Clinton’s tenure as
secretary of state and after.
June 28 – Huma Abedin, Clinton’s
deputy chief of staff and a senior advisor to Clinton throughout her
four years as secretary of state and also had an email account on clintonemail.com.
June 29 – Patrick F. Kennedy,
undersecretary for management since 2007 and the secretary of state’s
principal advisor on management issues, including technology and
information services.
As
you will see below, in a separate FOIA lawsuit concerning Hillary
Clinton and the Benghazi terrorist attack, U.S. District Court Judge
Royce Lamberth also ruled that we could conduct discovery into the email practices of Clinton and her top aides. This court-order testimony could finally reveal new truths about how Hillary Clinton and the Obama State Department subverted the Freedom of the Information Act.
Judicial Watch Seeks Hillary Clinton Testimony
The
question of whether Hillary Clinton can be questioned under oath by
Judicial Watch attorneys now is squarely before a federal court judge.
We also announced this week that we have filed a proposed order for discovery with a federal court that seeks the testimony of Hillary Clinton, herself, about her use of non-state.gov email account(s) for official State Department business.
This additional discovery comes in a July 2014 Freedom of Information (FOIA) lawsuit seeking records and communications in the Secretary’s Office related to the since discredited talking points used by then-U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice to describe the nature of the September 11, 2012, Benghazi attack (Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:14-cv-01242)).
Clinton’s proposed testimony would cover the State Department’s search of documents in response to Judicial Watch’s FOIA request and, according to the filing:
(In the lawsuit that has discovery already underway, Judge Emmett Sullivan noted in his May 4, 2016, order that “based on information learned during discovery, the deposition of Mrs. Clinton may be necessary.”)
In response to our request for her testimony, the Clinton campaign attacked your Judicial Watch with an over-the-top, false statement. We won’t be deterred, nor do I expect that the courts will be either.
Mrs. Clinton’s testimony will help the courts determine whether her email practices thwarted the purpose of the Freedom of Information Act.
In the meantime, you might enjoy watching this C-Span coverage of our Clinton email investigations.
We also announced this week that we have filed a proposed order for discovery with a federal court that seeks the testimony of Hillary Clinton, herself, about her use of non-state.gov email account(s) for official State Department business.
This additional discovery comes in a July 2014 Freedom of Information (FOIA) lawsuit seeking records and communications in the Secretary’s Office related to the since discredited talking points used by then-U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice to describe the nature of the September 11, 2012, Benghazi attack (Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:14-cv-01242)).
Clinton’s proposed testimony would cover the State Department’s search of documents in response to Judicial Watch’s FOIA request and, according to the filing:
- searches of the Office of the Secretary for emails relating to the September 12, 2012 Benghazi attack and its aftermath, including searches for the Accountability Review Board, congressional inquiries, other FOIA requests, and the preparation of Secretary Clinton’s testimony before Congress on January 23, 2013;
- the State Department’s policies, practices, procedures and/or actions (or lack thereof) to secure, inventory, and/or account for all records, including emails, of Secretary Clinton, prior to [her] termination of employment with the State Department; and
- the use of non-state.gov email account(s) to conduct official State Department business by Secretary Clinton and other officials and staff in the Office of the Secretary;
1.
All documents that concern or relate to the processing of any and all
searches of the Office of the Secretary for emails relating to the
September 11, 2012, Benghazi attack and its aftermath, including but not
limited to:
- searches for records for the Accountability Review Board;
- searches in response to congressional inquiries (including requests from the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform dated September 20, 2012, October 2, 2012, October 29, 2012, and November 1, 2012);
- searches in preparation of Secretary Clinton’s testimony before Congress on January 23, 2013; and
- searches in response to FOIA requests, including but not limited to the FOIA request submitted by Plaintiff in this case.
Such documents would include the tasking, tracking and reporting records
for such searches. Forms DS-1748 and any “search slips,” “search
tasker,” “search details,” shall also be considered responsive.
2.
All communications that concern or relate to the processing of all
searches referenced in Document Request No. 1 above, including
directions or guidance about how and where to conduct the searches,
whether and how to search Secretary Clinton’s email, and issues,
problems, or questions concerning the searches and/or search results.
3.
All records that concern or relate to the State Department’s policies,
practices, procedures and/or actions (or lack thereof) to secure,
inventory, and/or account for all records, including emails, of
Secretary Clinton, Cheryl Mills, Huma Abedin and Jacob Sullivan prior to
their termination of employment with the State Department.
U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth is also concerned about potential government misconduct. Judge Lamberth ruled on March 29 that
“where there is evidence of government wrong-doing and bad faith, as
here, limited discovery is appropriate, even though it is exceedingly
rare in FOIA cases.”(In the lawsuit that has discovery already underway, Judge Emmett Sullivan noted in his May 4, 2016, order that “based on information learned during discovery, the deposition of Mrs. Clinton may be necessary.”)
In response to our request for her testimony, the Clinton campaign attacked your Judicial Watch with an over-the-top, false statement. We won’t be deterred, nor do I expect that the courts will be either.
Mrs. Clinton’s testimony will help the courts determine whether her email practices thwarted the purpose of the Freedom of Information Act.
In the meantime, you might enjoy watching this C-Span coverage of our Clinton email investigations.
It is difficult to overstate the dangers of our open border with Mexico. For example, we reported
just last month that Mexican drug traffickers help Islamic terrorists
cross into the United States to explore targets for future attacks. And
we revealed in our Corruption Chronicles blog how the Obama administration wastes your tax money to fund studies to justify its lawlessness.This week, we uncovered that illegal aliens from countries such as Pakistan are exploiting Obama’s purposeful subversion of border security:
Until next week...
A
Pakistani man with a fake passport and residence card from two
different South American countries has been caught entering the U.S.
illegally through Mexico and federal court documents
reveal he has previously crossed into the country undetected by
immigration authorities. The distressing case comes less than a month
after Judicial Watch
reported that an ISIS operative who trained terrorists in Pakistan
travels back and forth through the porous southern border from a camp in
the Mexican state of Chihuahua not far from El Paso, Texas. His name is
Shaykh Mahmood Omar Khabir, a Kuwaiti who trained hundreds of Al Qaeda
fighters in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen, according to JW’s
high-ranking Homeland Security sources.
The Pakistani apprehended in the region this month, Javaid Muhammad, is
in federal custody in Texas and is scheduled to appear in court on May
20 in McAllen. U.S. Border Patrol agents busted him on May 8, according
to court documents obtained by JW, and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) has taken over the case. Authorities have
confiscated Muhammad’s fraudulent Ecuadorean passport and Chilean
residence card and he has admitted he’s never visited or resided in
either South American country. Muhammad also “admitted to illegally
crossing the international boundary of the United States without prior
inspection by a United States Immigration Officer,” court files state.
The FBI has evidence, including travel records and other government
files, that proves Muhammad’s statements to the Border Patrol and FBI
“were materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent,” the court documents
say.
Some of the records related to the case have been sealed by the
government so many of the specific details are not available, presumably
for security reasons. We do know that Muhammad initially lied to both
the Border Patrol and FBI and that he has provided the FBI with a sworn
statement detailing his illegal travel from Pakistan to the United
States, according to the files that have not been sealed. That
information is being kept under wraps by the feds. So is Muhammad’s
financial affidavit, which is listed on the federal court docket but not
available for public view. Another interesting tidbit is that American
taxpayers are providing the Pakistani with a free lawyer because the
judge, Dorina Ramos, determined
this week that Muhammad doesn’t have the money to hire one.
It remains unclear how many times Muhammad has entered the U.S.
illegally and if all the violations occurred through Mexico, though it
appears to be the case. As part of an ongoing investigation into the
growing terrorism threats on the southern border JW has reported that
Middle Eastern terrorists and Mexican drug cartels have joined forces to
infiltrate the U.S. to plan future attacks. Just a few weeks ago JW’s
government sources outlined the operation headed by Khabir, the ISIS
leader who’s training in Chihuahua and regularly crosses into the U.S.
assisted by Mexican drug traffickers. Khabir actually brags in an
Italian newspaper article that the border region is so open that he
“could get in with a handful of men, and kill thousands of people in
Texas or in Arizona in the space of a few hours.” Foreign Affairs
Secretary Claudia Ruiz, Mexico’s top diplomat, says in the article that
she doesn’t
understand why the Obama administration and the U.S. media are “culpably
neglecting this phenomenon,” adding that “this new wave of
fundamentalism could have nasty surprises in store for the United
States.”
Last summer JW wrote
about a sophisticated operation in which Mexican drug cartels smuggle
Middle Eastern terrorists into a small Texas rural town near El Paso
using remote farm roads—rather than interstates—to elude the Border
Patrol and other law enforcement barriers. The foreigners are
classified by the U.S. government as Special Interest Aliens (SIA) and
they are transported to stash areas in Acala, a rural crossroads located
around 54 miles from El Paso on a state road – Highway 20. Once in the
U.S., the SIAs wait for pick-up in the area’s sand hills just across
Highway 20. At the time JW’s government sources revealed that
terrorists have long entered the U.S. through Mexico and in fact, an
internal Texas Department of Public Safety report leaked by the media
documents that several members of known Islamist terrorist organizations
have been apprehended crossing the southern border in recent years.
A few months after JW broke the Acala smuggling piece, five young Middle Eastern men were apprehended
by the Border Patrol in an Arizona town situated about 30 miles from the
Mexican border. Federal agents spotted the men crossing a ranch
property in the vicinity of Amado, which is located about 35 miles south
of Tucson and has a population of 275. Two of the Middle Eastern men
were carrying stainless steel cylinders in backpacks. Days earlier six
men—one from Afghanistan, five from Pakistan—were arrested in nearby
Patagonia, a quaint ranch town that sits 20 miles north of the Mexican
border city of Nogales.
Do you think this one Pakistani is the only person from regions of the
world consumed by Islamic terrorist ideology that exploits our open
borders? Does Congress? Does Barack Obama? Does the governor of
Texas? One might ask these and other elected officials whether their
responses are commensurate with the threat. Tom Fitton
President
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