A TEXT POST

Three Instances That The Clinton Campaign Admits They Lied About Emails

Today, the Clinton campaign released a brand new Q&A factsheet about Hillary Clinton’s use of private email at the State Department. The campaign added a number of things to supplement their old fact sheet, so they could continue the obfuscation tactics they have used for months. However, three of the “facts” in the campaign’s new post highlight three instances in which the campaign acknowledges they misled the public back in March 2015.

1) Clinton Claimed She Turned Over All Emails But She Didn’t 

March 2015:

July 2015:

image

2) Clinton’s Campaign Said She Didn’t Received Classified Emails, But Now Recognize That Some Are Now Classified

March 2015:

image

July 2015:

image

3) The Campaign Said Clinton Used One Device For Simplicity, But Now Acknowledge She Used Multiple

March 2015:

image

July 2015:

image
A TEXT POST

The Washington Post’s Fact Checker: Hillary Clinton Lied about State Department Emails

In a recent interview with CNN, Hillary Clinton stated that “everything I did was permitted” regarding her handling of her State Department emails. Washington Post Fact Checkers dug into this claim and here is what they found:

Regulations Were Put In Place While She Was Secretary of State

In 2009, just eight months after Clinton became secretary of state, the U.S. Code of federal regulations on handling electronic records was updated: “Agencies that allow employees to send and receive official electronic mail messages using a system not operated by the agency must ensure that Federal records sent or received on such systems are preserved in the appropriate agency record-keeping system.”

Clinton’s system though did not allow for her emails to be easily preserved because “her practice made it difficult to locate records in response to specific requests, because Clinton’s e-mail would be in another official’s inbox — but would not exist in the federal system as part of Clinton’s outbox.”

She Even Told Her Staff To Not Use Private Emails

On top of that, when Clinton was secretary, a cable went out under her signature warning employees to “avoid conducting official Department business from your personal e-mail accounts.”

Clinton Ignored Directives from The Foreign Service Manual

The Foreign Affairs Manual made it clear that before a senior official (such as a Senate-confirmed presidential appointee) departs government service, he or she must prepare an inventory of personal papers that are proposed for removal. The manual states that “correspondence or e-mail received or sent in an employee’s capacity as a Department official is not personal.”

It is now apparent that Secretary Clinton blatantly disregarded these directives. Instead she chose to keep her emails for nearly two years before turning them over to the State Department.

Final Conclusion: Three Pinocchios

In reality, Clinton’s decision to use a private e-mail system for official business was highly unusual and flouted State Department procedures, even if not expressly prohibited by law at the time. Moreover, while she claims “everything I did was permitted,” she appears to have not complied with the requirement to turn over her business-related e-mails before she left government service. That’s a major misstep that she has not acknowledged.

image

Originally posted by only-and-forever-yours

A TEXT POST

Hillary Clinton Staffer: Clinton The Public Face Of U.S. Libya Effort

Based on the Benghazi e-mails released today by the New York Times, a top foreign policy adviser called Hillary Clinton “the public face of the U.S. effort in Libya” and said Clinton had the “leadership/ownership/stewardship of this country’s Libya policy”. Despite being heavily engaged in the process to end Gaddafi’s rule in Libya, Clinton ultimately failed to execute a strategy for a post-Gaddafi Libya. One democratic Congresswoman, Tulsi Gabbard, said Clinton and Obama had “no after plan, there was no plan on what happens next” in Libya.

image