State Department
Asked Hillary Clinton Attorney to Delete Copies of Classified Benghazi Email
An email captured in a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
lawsuit demonstrates that the State Department asked Hillary Clinton’s attorney to delete copies of a
classified email related to the 2012 Benghazi terror attacks.
Judicial Watch reported that Patrick Kennedy, the
undersecretary for management at the State Department, penned a letter to
Clinton attorney David Kendall in May recommending he delete all electronic copies of the “secret” email.
Kennedy wrote:
I am writing in reference to the following e-mail that is among the
approximately 55,000 pages that were identified as potential federal records
and produced on behalf of former Secretary Clinton to the [Department] of State
on December 5, 2014: E-mail forwarded by Jacob Sullivan to Secretary Clinton on
November 18, 2012 at 8:44 pm.
(Subject: Fw: FYI- Report of arrests–possible Benghazi connection).
Please be advised that today the above referenced e-mail, which
previously was unclassified, has been classified as “Secret” pursuant to
Section 1.7(d) of Executive Order 13526 in connection with a review and release
under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). In order to safeguard and protect
the classified information, I ask–consistent with my letter to you dated March
23 2015–that you, Secretary Clinton and others assisting her in responding to
congressional and related inquiries coordinate in taking the steps set forth
below. A copy of the document as redacted under the FOIA is attached to assist
you in your search.
Once you have made the electronic copy of the documents for the
Department, please locate any electronic copies of the above-referenced
classified document in your possession. If you
locate any electronic copies, please delete them. Additionally, once you have done that, please empty your “Deleted Items”
folder.
The letter demonstrates
that the State Department recognized the presence of classified material on
Clinton’s personal email system months before it was disclosed in the media.
Kendall declined to immediately follow Kennedy’s orders, writing
back in June that it would not be “prudent” to delete copies of the email until
after document preservation requests from the House Select Committee on
Benghazi, the State Department inspector general, and the intelligence
community inspector general expire.
Kendall
was in possession of three computer thumb drives
containing all of Clinton’s work-related emails until the
FBI determined that he could not continue to hold emails
containing classified information. The attorney was forced to hand over the
drives to the Justice Department at the same time Clinton relinquished her
server.
Multiple intelligence agencies have confirmed that at least two of the emails
contained on the former secretary of state’s personal system held top
secret information at the
time they were sent. Hundreds more have been flagged for possibly containing classified
information.
Clinton has repeatedly denied sending or receiving information marked
classified on her personal email.
Courtesy : Morgan Chalfant , www.freebeacon.com
Courtesy : Morgan Chalfant , www.freebeacon.com
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