Imagine your political party has won the recent presidential
election, and the man elected to be president has pegged you to be Secretary of
State. What an honor. Secretary of State is one of the most important and
prestigious positions in the federal government; it is one of the most critical
positions in the government, dealing with sensitive international matters, such
as agreements and disputes, the communications associated with which often carry
security classifications, such as “classified,” “secret,” or “top secret.”
There are processes and systems in place to facilitate your communications,
both classified and unclassified, between and among individuals and departments
within the government, and with officials of other governments, official
systems and processes that track these official communications as a matter of
efficiency, accountability, national security and historical record.
With this in mind, and after going through the FBI’s briefing
on the official communications protocol, and swearing under oath that you have
been briefed and understand the process and protocol and why it exists, you
then decide that rather than utilize the official secured government communications
system you have been briefed on, as your predecessors did, you will use your
own private email server to handle official government business as well as your
own personal email communications.
Question: What would be the reason for making the unusual
and unprecedented decision to conduct official communications on a private
system instead of on the official and secured government system, a system to
which only you have access, and that denies the government the ability to have
complete access to your official communications?
Eventually, this decision enters the public sphere and is
predictably met with many questions, and very effectively fertilizes the
environment for suspicion of your motives. Political opponents will be
emboldened, and you are the one who has emboldened them, and questions will
arise about both your judgment and the possibility of illegal activity.
This is the sticky wicket that Hillary Clinton, Secretary of
State from January 21, 2009 to February 1, 2013, and now candidate for the
Democrat nomination for President of the United States, created for herself
with this curious decision as she assumed the position of Secretary of State.
Mrs. Clinton’s political opponents – the “vast right-wing
conspiracy” – have indeed noticed this irregularity, and finally the mainstream
media is also taking notice.
NBC News commentator Andrea Mitchell –
no right-wing conspirator she – shared comments from intelligence officials who
have told her that, “nobody can give an explanation for why a cabinet secretary
would have a private email system other than to thwart inquiries, FOIAs
[Freedom of Information Act inquiries],” which she mentioned recently on
MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” program.
Andrea Mitchell is not the only one interested in the
question raised by those intelligence officials. And the new questions raised
by those other interested parties go beyond mere curiosity about why a cabinet
secretary would have taken this unusual step. The more serious issue is whether
or not classified information passed through Mrs. Clinton’s private email
system, a clear violation of federal law.
Mark Levin, former chief of staff for Attorney General Edwin
Meese in President Ronald Reagan’s administration, also an attorney, author and
talk show host, sees breaches of the federal Penal Code, specifically Section
793 of the Penal Code, Subsection (f).
“My point is,” Mr. Levin said, “when you set up an unsecured
server in your barn adjacent to your home in Chappaqua, New York, you have
intentionally – forget about negligence – you have intentionally bypassed the
security process for that server.”
If a private system was her chosen method for email
communication, both personal and governmental, even if she avoided sending emails
containing classified information, how could she prevent classified information
from being sent to her on her private system? In short: How could Mrs. Clinton
not have had classified information on her private server?
Some offer the defense of intent, suggesting that it matters
if she did not intend to allow classified information to be lost, stolen,
abstracted or destroyed. But Mr. Levin says, “No it doesn’t, not with respect
to this, Subsection (f).”
Former federal judge and Attorney
General Michael Mukasey comments: “Once you assume a public office, your communications
about anything having to do with your job are not your personal business or
property. They are the public’s business and the public’s property, and are to
be treated as no different from communications of like sensitivity.”
And this from McClatchy
DC last Wednesday: “The inspectors general for the U.S. Intelligence
Community and the State Department have disclosed over the last week that at
least five emails, routed through a private server that Clinton used throughout
her tenure as secretary of state, contained classified information, including
two emails whose content is now deemed to be ‘Top Secret.’”
Even if somehow Mrs. Clinton escapes being charged with
crimes in this incident, her behavior – from the idea of having her own private
email server in the first place, to the elaborate cleansing process she
utilized to clear all data from the email server, and the release of the email
communications that she alone determined was relevant – raises important
questions about her lack of judgment and what her motivation was.
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