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State Dept. declares 22 Clinton emails ‘top secret’

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton checked her Blackberry from a desk inside a C-17 military plane upon her Oct. 2011 departure from Malta, in the Mediterranean Sea, bound for Tripoli, Libya.

WASHINGTON » The Obama administration confirmed for the first time today that Hillary Clinton’s home server contained closely guarded government secrets, censoring 22 emails that contained material requiring one of the highest levels of classification. The revelation comes three days before Clinton competes in the Iowa presidential caucuses.

State Department officials also said the agency’s Diplomatic Security and Intelligence and Research bureaus are investigating if any of the information was classified at the time of transmission, going to the heart of Clinton’s defense of her email practices.

The department will release its next batch of emails from her time as secretary of state later today.

But The Associated Press learned seven email chains are being withheld in full for containing “top secret” information. The 37 pages include messages a key intelligence official recently said concerned “special access programs” —highly restricted, classified material that could point to confidential sources or clandestine programs like drone strikes.

“The documents are being upgraded at the request of the intelligence community because they contain a category of top secret information,” State Department spokesman John Kirby told the AP, calling the withholding of documents in full “not unusual.” That means they won’t be published online with others being released, even with blacked-out boxes.

Department officials wouldn’t describe the substance of the emails, or say if Clinton sent any herself.

Clinton, the Democratic presidential front-runner, insists she never sent or received information on her personal email account that was classified at the time. No emails released so far were stamped “CLASSIFIED” or “TOP SECRET,” but reviewers previously designated more than 1,000 messages at lower classification levels. Today’s will be the first at top secret level.

Even if Clinton didn’t write or forward the messages, she still would have been required to report any classification slippages she recognized in emails she received. But without classification markings, that may have been difficult, especially if the information was publicly available.

“We firmly oppose the complete blocking of the release of these emails,” Clinton campaign spokesman Brain Fallon said. “Since first providing her emails to the State Department more than one year ago, Hillary Clinton has urged that they be made available to the public. We feel no differently today.”

Fallon accused the “loudest and leakiest participants” in a process of bureaucratic infighting for withholding the exchanges. The documents, he said, originated in the State Department’s unclassified system before they ever reached Clinton, and “in at least one case, the emails appear to involve information from a published news article.”

“This appears to be overclassification run amok,” Fallon said.

Kirby said the State Department was focused, as part of a Freedom of Information Act review of Clinton’s emails, on “whether they need to be classified today.” Past classification questions, he said, “are being, and will be, handled separately by the State Department.” It is the first indication of such a probe.

Department responses for classification infractions could include counseling, warnings or other action, officials said. They wouldn’t say if Clinton or senior aides who’ve since left government could face penalties. The officials weren’t authorized to speak on the matter and demanded anonymity.

Separately, Kirby said the department is withholding eight email chains, totaling 18 messages, between President Barack Obama and Clinton. These are remaining confidential “to protect the president’s ability to receive unvarnished advice and counsel,” and will be released eventually like other presidential records.

The emails have been a Clinton campaign issue since 10 months ago, when the AP discovered her exclusive use while in office of a homebrew email server in the basement of her family’s New York home. Doing so wasn’t expressly forbidden. Clinton first called the decision a matter of convenience, then a mistake.

Last March, Clinton and the State Department said no business conducted in the emails included top-secret matters. Both said her account was never hacked or compromised, which security experts assess as unlikely.

Clinton and the State Department also claimed the vast majority of her emails were preserved properly for archiving because she corresponded mainly with government accounts. They’ve backtracked from that claim in recent months.

The special access programs emails surfaced last week, when Charles I. McCullough, lead auditor for U.S. intelligence agencies, told Congress he found some in Clinton’s account.

Kirby confirmed the “denied-in-full emails” are among those McCullough recently cited. He said one was among those McCullough identified last summer as possibly containing top secret information.

The AP reported last August that one focused on a forwarded news article about the CIA’s classified U.S. drone program. Such operations are widely discussed publicly, including by top U.S. officials, and State Department officials debated McCullough’s claim. The other concerned North Korean nuclear weapons programs, according to officials.

At the time, several officials from different agencies suggested the disagreement over the drone emails reflected a tendency to overclassify material, and a lack of consistent classification policies across government.

The FBI also is looking into Clinton’s email setup, but has said nothing about the nature of its probe. Independent experts say it’s unlikely Clinton will be charged with wrongdoing, based on details that have surfaced so far and the lack of indications she intended to break laws.

“What I would hope comes out of all of this is a bit of humility” and Clinton’s acknowledgement that “I made some serious mistakes,” said Bradley Moss, a Washington lawyer specializing in security clearance matters.

Legal questions aside, it’s the potential political costs that probably more concern Clinton. She has struggled in surveys measuring perceived trustworthiness and any investigation, buoyed by evidence of top secret material coursing through her account, could negate a main selling point for her becoming commander in chief: her national security resume.

26 responses to “State Dept. declares 22 Clinton emails ‘top secret’”

  1. Jiujitsu_Fighter says:

    She should admit guilt now so the Feds give her a deal. The worst is yet to come.

  2. mnsato says:

    never ever vote for that bi..h

  3. FARKWARD says:

    A VERY SPOOKY-PERSON… She makes most criminal-minded-psychopaths look angelic…

  4. waikikihealth says:

    Please proof your headline copy…delcares (sp?)

  5. Citizen X says:

    The feds consider everything top secret, like how they spy on us. Top secret doesn’t mean anything anymore because they over-use it.

  6. Keonigohan says:

    28% feels she’s trustworthy….72% think not.
    LIAR is what 52% of the people think of her.
    She has no accomplishments.

    “Defending the Indefensible” is a difficult liberal task.

    Only question I have is who is worse..hiLIARy..or O?

  7. den says:

    what else is new…

  8. WizardOfMoa says:

    She is or was labeled as one of the 100 most intelligent lawyers during her husband initial bid for the White House! If that’s what’s a smart lawyer is than our country is in deep trouble! An old buck like me, with little knowledge of computers, know enough not to mix personal and business informations. How could such an “intelligent person, and a Secretary of State at that, endangered our country by her absurdity!

  9. NanakuliBoss says:

    Nothing will come out of this gaberdash Just fluffy paper selling. Hillary is the number 1 pin up model for white middle age senior GOP folks. That’s one chicken they would like to ____.

  10. Oahuan says:

    Go ahead all you liberals in Hawaii, go ahead and vote for her. Hahaha!

  11. cojef says:

    Campaign manager has no expertise to determine whether any email sent or received via the private server is classified or not. Thus his statement the “…over classification ran amok”. Hillary is in deep sh-t.

  12. jusjoking says:

    Snowden would make the perfect running mate.

  13. st1d says:

    hiliar just doesn’t recognize that her time has passed, long ago. now instead of ducking live fire in bosnia she will be ducking cavity searches.

    obama owes hiliar for lying about benghazi to keep the incident from blowing up his re-election campaign. won’t be surprised if obama offers clinton a pardon while he is still in office.

    it’s biden/bloomberg time for democrats.

    meanwhile, bill clinton will be lighting up another of his special cigars.

  14. cojef says:

    The Pentagon is considering demoting a General for giving his biographer an ex-colonel and girlfriend a number of classified material, aside from the fact that as an officer herself she had been authorized to handle classified documents.. In the State Department case, we are speaking about 22 highly classified material. Something stink when the Justice Department is not doing anything on this matter?

  15. Ronin006 says:

    Bernie Sanders and Obama had a private “top secret” meeting in his office on Wednesday. Two days later the Obama State Department admits for the first time that 22 emails found on Hillary’s private server were “top secret.” The timing of these two events may not have been coincidental. It could be signaling the end of Hillary’s campaign for president which will come when the FBI official recommends charges against her. I do not believe the Obama administration will indict her, but it will “top secretly” force her to drop out of the campaign for president.

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