Hillary’s Henchmen Pressured FBI on Classification of Documents
Today
the FBI released another 100 pages relating to its investigation of
Hillary Clinton’s conduct as Secretary of State. Why it has taken so
long for the agency to review, redact and publish a very small quantity
of documents is inexplicable. Be that as it may, the documents released
today are explosive.
You
may have seen headlines to the effect that Hillary’s State Department
tried to pressure the FBI to say that various documents located on
Hillary’s insecure home server were not classified. This was critical,
obviously, because one of Hillary’s lines of defense was to claim,
falsely, that she never sent or received classified documents on her
off-the-books email system.
Those headlines are correct, but to get the full impact you really have to see the relevant portions of the FBI investigation. Here they are; in all cases, click to enlarge. But first, a description.
In the
first page, an unidentified FBI employee says he was “pressured” to
change the classification of an email to render it unclassified. This pressure came from someone within the FBI,
who said he had been contacted by Undersecretary of State Patrick
Kennedy, who “had asked his assistance in altering the email’s
classification in exchange for a ‘quid pro quo.'” The quid pro quo was
that, if the FBI would say the email was unclassified, the State
Department would allow the FBI to “place more Agents in countries where
they are presently forbidden.”
Subsequently,
the interviewee was summoned to an “all agency” meeting at the State
Department to discuss the classification review of the Hillary Clinton
emails. This fact itself is astonishing: the meeting was attended by
representatives of the State Department, the CIA, the Defense
Intelligence Agency “and other government agencies,” including,
obviously, the FBI. Patrick Kennedy presided. Someone asked whether any
of the Hillary emails that were being reviewed for production were
classified. Kennedy replied, “Well, we’ll see.”
Following
the all agency meeting, Undersecretary of State Kennedy renewed his
effort to pressure the FBI to change its classification of the document
in question. The FBI representative wouldn’t budge, so Kennedy asked who
else at the agency he could talk to. The interviewee gave the name of
Michael Steinbach.
The
interviewee then participated in a call with Kennedy and Steinbach, in
which Kennedy “continued to pressure the FBI to change the classified
markings on the email to unclassified.” Steinbach refused. What happened
next is–deserves to be, anyway–a bombshell.
Prior to ending the conversation, KENNEDY asked whether the FBI or STATE would conduct the public statements on the matter. STEINBACH advised KENNEDY that the FBI would not comment publicly on the matter.
That was enough for the astonishingly corrupt Hillary Clinton. This is what happened next:
The conference call ended and, according to [ ], the Associated Press (AP) published the story within the hour. Former Secretary of State Clinton appeared in front of the press shortly thereafter to deny having sent classified emails on her private email server.
Here are the first two pages of the relevant FBI investigation file:
The
next page of the FBI investigation report is a summary of an interview
with someone at the agency–I assume the Mr. Steinbach already referred
to. This person says that he got a phone call from Patrick Kennedy,
which surprised him because he and another FBI official “had both been
trying to contact KENNEDY for months without response.” What did Kennedy
want? He “asked [ ] assistance in changing a classification of FBI
information contained in an email.”
Kennedy
explained that the classified email “caused problems,” and he wanted to
categorize the document as a B9. The reference apparently is to a
Freedom of Information Act exemption, but this is not clear. In any
event, Kennedy said that such a classification would “allow him to
archive the document in the basement of DoS [the State Department] never
to be seen again.” Here is that page of the investigation report:
Finally,
the last page of this part of the report quotes an FBI employee whose
name is redacted, who contacted Patrick Kennedy to talk about the
classification issue. Before talking to Kennedy, he learned that “the
email of KENNEDY’s concern was classified by the FBI Counterterrorism
Division (CTD) and was related to the attacks on the U.S. Consulate in
Benghazi.” Having been told this, the FBI interviewee “contacted KENNEDY
and informed him that there was no way he could assist KENNEDY with
declassifying the information contained in the email.”
We
have here a clear pattern of corruption that makes Watergate look like
child’s play. Hillary’s aide, Patrick Kennedy, tried to bribe the FBI to
change the classification of a Benghazi document so as to enable
Hillary’s false claim that she didn’t send or receive classified
information on her illegal home server. The FBI, to its credit, refused.
(James Comey wasn’t involved at that stage.)
Hillary’s
aide then asked whether the FBI would be saying anything publicly about
the classification issue. Once assured that the FBI would be silent,
Hillary took the stage and alleged publicly, and falsely, that she never
used her illegal home server to send or receive classified information.
One wonders, too, how many critically important documents have been
“archive[d] … in the basement of DoS [the State Department] never to be
seen again,” based on bogus FOIA exemptions.
Donald Trump has his faults, but Hillary Clinton is far too corrupt to serve as President of the United States.
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