Probe into Clinton emails free of outside influence
Baker wrote the letter February 2 to the State Department’s acting legal adviser.
Nice of the FBI to confirm its investigation of its investigation into Hillary’s email the day before NH primary.
The letter was produced in response to a court order in a Judicial Watch Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit before U.S. District Court Judge Emmett Sullivan. He ends the one-paragraph letter by saying that the Federal Bureau of Investigation can not say more “without adversely affecting on-going law enforcement efforts”.
Priebus wrote that the announcement by the FBI confirms that investigation into the email server of Hillary Clinton is far from being completed.
In a letter, the FBI’s general counsel, James Baker acknowledged the investigation, according to The Daily Caller.
The FBI’s investigation is now officially confirmed, although specific details about the bureau’s progress or whether or not they consider Clinton’s actions criminal remain a mystery.
While the FBI has not described the investigation in-depth, GOP leaders are using the official confirmation as evidence that Clinton is not electable, Washington Times reports. Ms. Clinton’s inability to distinguish classified from non-classified information, or her failure to care about it, should disqualify her from any position of trust such as the presidency.
“The Obama State Department has now confirmed that Clinton, Abedin, and Sullivan used unsecured, nongovernmental email accounts to communicate information that should now be withheld from the American people ‘in the interest of national defense or foreign policy, and properly classified.’ When can we expect the indictments?” he added.
“This is a security review requested and carried out that will be resolved”, she said.
Regardless of the party or the political aspirations of any individual responsible for such security breaches, any compromise of classified information that puts American lives at risk is legitimate grounds for judicial review and possible prosecution.