Saturday, April 14, 2018

Emails

If the government ever subpoenas any of your documents here is the way to handle it. There is much controversy surrounding the case of Hilary Clinton's emails and whether she destroyed subpoenaed documents. She did and she didn't and here is how it went. In September of 2012 a request was sent to Clinton for all documents having anything to do with Benghazi. After receiving no response for over two years the Oversight Committee issued a subpoena in October of 2014 for the same documents. That subpoena along with a law suits filed under the Freedom of Information Act caused Clinton to ask her lawyers to go through the 55,000 pages of emails requested and take out all those they felt were related to Benghazi and send those and then they removed the now famous 33,000 and destroyed those. So that was it: the Clinton team produced what it said were all her work-related emails to the State Department and then ordered its tech people to destroy everything, and then put a new policy in place in which no emails would be saved for more than 60 days. To make sure no copies of the destroyed emails were retained on other computers Clinton then ordered: In December 2014 — after the emails were sent to the State Department — Mills ordered people whose identity was not revealed by the FBI to delete Clinton email archives from their computers. These emails were all on Clinton's private server which was stored in her home so there were no back up copies on any government server as the law provides.

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