Re: How will Benghazi affect Hillary's run?
Posted: Wed Jan 06, 2016 9:50 pm
He's an old-school Clinton foe.Alefroth wrote:What role does DiGenova have in the investigation?
That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons bring us some web forums whereupon we can gather
http://garbi.online/forum/
He's an old-school Clinton foe.Alefroth wrote:What role does DiGenova have in the investigation?
Shooting his mouth off as if his opinion is fact?Alefroth wrote:What role does DiGenova have in the investigation?
And this is how you know he's full of crap. There hasn't been anything even remotely as scandal-worthy or as corrupt as Watergate leaked about her emails. It's not even on the same plane of existence as Watergate.Rip wrote:"I believe that the evidence that the FBI is compiling will be so compelling that, unless [Lynch] agrees to the charges, there will be a massive revolt inside the FBI, which she will not be able to survive as an attorney general. It will be like Watergate. It will be unbelievable," DiGenova said.
Max Peck wrote:He's an old-school Clinton foe.Alefroth wrote:What role does DiGenova have in the investigation?
http://www.cnn.com/2016/01/08/politics/ ... index.htmlThe chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee released a scathing statement Friday, calling on Hillary Clinton to "come clean" after the State Department released an email in which she asked an aide to send information on a non-secure system after attempts to send the document securely failed.
Sen. Chuck Grassley said the email, released at about 1:30 am Friday morning along with about 3,000 other emails from Clinton's State Department tenure, is "disturbing," and "appears to show the former Secretary of State instructing a subordinate to remove the headings from a classified document and send it to her in an unsecure manner."
On June 16, 2011, top Clinton aide Jake Sullivan wrote to Clinton to say she would get "tps" -- presumably short for "talking points" that evening. The subject of the email is redacted so it's not clear what topic these points covered.
The next morning, Clinton wrote back to say she hadn't received them yet, and after a few minutes Sullivan responded that staff were having issues sending the document in a secure fax but that they were "working on it."
"If they can't," Clinton replies, "turn into nonpaper w no identifying heading and send nonsecure."
READ: Hillary Clinton 'surprised' by State staffer's personal email use
Clinton's critics are now seizing on the email, and say it shows a disregard of the security of classified information.
I am saying that when you direct a subordinate to send classified information via a non-secure method you have violated the law. Period.Zarathud wrote:Rip, are you really suggesting you want a President who isn't going to bellow at their IT staff, I don't care how you get that information sent to me -- JUST GET IT DONE?
If you can't intimidate your IT staff, how can you take on Putin? I thought you wanted a maverick cowboy outsider for President.
But when it's your grocery list, maybe it's a technicality.Rip wrote:I am saying that when you direct a subordinate to send classified information via a non-secure method you have violated the law. Period.Zarathud wrote:Rip, are you really suggesting you want a President who isn't going to bellow at their IT staff, I don't care how you get that information sent to me -- JUST GET IT DONE?
If you can't intimidate your IT staff, how can you take on Putin? I thought you wanted a maverick cowboy outsider for President.
It isn't up to a someone cleared to access classified information to decide whether it is important and should be sent via non-secure methods. The laws are very clear and no one else has ever been allowed a pass using that excuse, why should she be special?GreenGoo wrote:I literally don't care. Show me that it was more important to keep secure than it was to be transmitted and I might start caring.
Every time you post one of these I give Hillary more benefit of the doubt, not less. Give me something serious Rip, otherwise it just comes across as a petty submarine job, and given Benghazi investigations, you've got a tough job convincing me this is somehow different from that boondoggle.
GreenGoo wrote:But when it's your grocery list, maybe it's a technicality.Rip wrote:I am saying that when you direct a subordinate to send classified information via a non-secure method you have violated the law. Period.Zarathud wrote:Rip, are you really suggesting you want a President who isn't going to bellow at their IT staff, I don't care how you get that information sent to me -- JUST GET IT DONE?
If you can't intimidate your IT staff, how can you take on Putin? I thought you wanted a maverick cowboy outsider for President.
GreenGoo wrote:Shrug. You have incredible confidence in the competency of the federal government all of a sudden.
Truly the do-nothing party.The House Benghazi Committee missed a self-imposed deadline to issue a report "before summer," the latest setback for a probe that has gone on for more than two years and drawn scorn from Democrats who say its primary goal is to undermine Hillary Clinton's presidential bid.
Committee Democrats, led by Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Maryland, say it was necessary to release their own report because the Republicans, led by Chairman Trey Gowdy, R-South Carolina, refused to issue a joint report that would incorporate opinions of the minority group...
...Administration officials did not make intentionally misleading statements about the attacks, but instead relied on information they were provided at the time under fast-moving circumstances," the report reads.
The report quotes March testimony from Gen. David Petraeus, who was the CIA director at the time of the attack.
"I’m still not absolutely certain what absolutely took place, whether it was a mix of people that are demonstrating with attackers in there, whether this is an organized demonstration to launch an attack, whether ... there was a protest and it grew out of the protest," Petraeus told the committee.
Petraeus said the video of the attack also makes it unclear if there were protesters mixed in with attackers.
Democrats' report also concludes that the committee found no evidence that Clinton personally denied any security requests from personnel in Benghazi.
It goes on. Essentially, every single charge leveled in hyperbolic fashion by the GOP against Hilary and Obama was mostly or completely false. What a waste of time and treasure.A comparison of key findings in investigations into the 2012 attacks on the U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya that killed U.S. ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans:
PREVENTING THE ATTACKS:
House Benghazi Committee Republicans, June 28, 2016: Faults the Obama administration for loose security at the post. There were rarely more than a handful of security personnel there, and the facility's design did not meet security requirements.
House Benghazi Committee Democrats, June 27, 2016: State Department security measures in Benghazi were inadequate as a result of decisions made by mid-level officials. U.S. intelligence received no advance warning of attacks.
Senate Intelligence Committee, bipartisan, January 2014: Attacks could have been prevented. U.S. intelligence didn't send enough warnings about the potential threat. The State Department could have closed the Benghazi facility until security was improved.
House Intelligence Committee, bipartisan, November 2014: U.S. diplomatic facility in Benghazi was insufficiently protected. State Department security agents knew they could not defend it from a well-armed attack.
linkBuried in the hundreds of pages of the highly-anticipated House Benghazi Committee report is something that may not have been seen by the mainstream media outlets at first, but it is quickly gathering momentum in the 24-hour news cycle. On page 269 of the report issued by Rep. Trey Gowdy’s (R-SC) select committee after roughly two years of investigating is the fact that former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton was in fact the infamous “second gunman on the grassy knoll” in the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
Working with Ted Cruz's dad (or was it granddad) I think...Defiant wrote:linkBuried in the hundreds of pages of the highly-anticipated House Benghazi Committee report is something that may not have been seen by the mainstream media outlets at first, but it is quickly gathering momentum in the 24-hour news cycle. On page 269 of the report issued by Rep. Trey Gowdy’s (R-SC) select committee after roughly two years of investigating is the fact that former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton was in fact the infamous “second gunman on the grassy knoll” in the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
Exactly what law was broken?Rip wrote:I am saying that when you direct a subordinate to send classified information via a non-secure method you have violated the law. Period.Zarathud wrote:Rip, are you really suggesting you want a President who isn't going to bellow at their IT staff, I don't care how you get that information sent to me -- JUST GET IT DONE?
If you can't intimidate your IT staff, how can you take on Putin? I thought you wanted a maverick cowboy outsider for President.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-of ... nformationGrifman wrote:Exactly what law was broken?Rip wrote:I am saying that when you direct a subordinate to send classified information via a non-secure method you have violated the law. Period.Zarathud wrote:Rip, are you really suggesting you want a President who isn't going to bellow at their IT staff, I don't care how you get that information sent to me -- JUST GET IT DONE?
If you can't intimidate your IT staff, how can you take on Putin? I thought you wanted a maverick cowboy outsider for President.
I wonder why?hepcat wrote:And yet there doesn't seem to be an arrest warrant out for Mrs. Clinton.
Yeah. Arrest warrants are still cool. Search warrants are going out of style.Defiant wrote:I thought warrants were passe? or is it just for wiretapping?
And that, my friend, is why Hillary should be president. She's smart enough to wiggle out of this kind of thing, while Trump is still neck deep in his criminal wrongdoings.Rip wrote:I wonder why?hepcat wrote:And yet there doesn't seem to be an arrest warrant out for Mrs. Clinton.
<insert picture of brilliant action by the Clintons>
Nope 30 minute private conversation on the plane with no reporters or staff. We weren't even supposed to know then some nosy reporter ventured off the talking points.Holman wrote:Ah, so it was one of those secret conspiratorial meetings held in public between two parties accompanied by staff and reporters?
"I did see President Clinton at the Phoenix airport as he was leaving and spoke to myself and my husband on the plane," said Lynch.
The private meeting also occurred hours before the Benghazi report was released publicly involving Hillary Clinton and President Obama's administration.
Lynch said the private meeting on the tarmac did not involve these topics.
Sources say the private meeting at the airport lasted around 30 minutes.
Perhaps it was to thank her for making sure no one finds out about the link between The Clinton Foundation and SecState business for at least a couple years?Holman wrote:But still highly visible in that everyone is reporting on it.
How would Bill Clinton talking to Lynch affect Lynch's response to a report that finds Hillary Clinton did nothing wrong?
Department of Justice officials filed a motion in federal court late Wednesday seeking a 27-month delay in producing correspondence between former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s four top aides and officials with the Clinton Foundation and Teneo Holdings, a closely allied public relations firm that Bill Clinton helped launch.
If the court permits the delay, the public won’t be able to read the communications until October 2018, about 22 months into her prospective first term as President. The four senior Clinton aides involved were Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Michael Fuchs, Ambassador-At-Large Melanne Verveer, Chief of Staff Cheryl Mills, and Deputy Chief of Staff Huma Abedin.
During Clinton’s four years as America’s chief foreign diplomat, her aides communicated with officials at the Clinton Foundation and Teneo Holdings where Bill Clinton was formerly both a client and paid consultant, on the average of 700 times each month, according to the Justice Department filing.
What is the penalty for violation of this executive order? It seems to be setting standards for the handling of classified information but I don't see any penalties there.Rip wrote:https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-of ... nformationGrifman wrote:Exactly what law was broken?Rip wrote:I am saying that when you direct a subordinate to send classified information via a non-secure method you have violated the law. Period.Zarathud wrote:Rip, are you really suggesting you want a President who isn't going to bellow at their IT staff, I don't care how you get that information sent to me -- JUST GET IT DONE?
If you can't intimidate your IT staff, how can you take on Putin? I thought you wanted a maverick cowboy outsider for President.
The Supreme Court has ruled that application of this statue requires both "intent" to injure the US and "bad faith":
No it doesn't.Grifman wrote:Rip wrote:https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-of ... nformationGrifman wrote:Exactly what law was broken?Rip wrote:I am saying that when you direct a subordinate to send classified information via a non-secure method you have violated the law. Period.Zarathud wrote:Rip, are you really suggesting you want a President who isn't going to bellow at their IT staff, I don't care how you get that information sent to me -- JUST GET IT DONE?
If you can't intimidate your IT staff, how can you take on Putin? I thought you wanted a maverick cowboy outsider for President.
What is the penalty for violation of this executive order? It seems to be setting standards for the handling of classified information but I don't see any penalties there.
The Supreme Court has ruled that application of this statue requires both "intent" to injure the US and "bad faith":
http://lawnewz.com/high-profile/no-hill ... now-today/
You'd have a hard time proving that Clinton's intent was to harm the US.
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/politic ... 12972.htmlLegal experts say investigators could be looking into potential violations of Section 1924 of Title 18, which deals with the unauthorized removal and retention of classified documents or material, or even the Espionage Act, which makes it a crime for anyone "through gross negligence," to allow the loss, theft or removal of classified information or fails to promptly report such mishandling to his superior.
Donald Trump's campaign on Tuesday seized on revelations that the FBI has recovered an additional 30 emails from Hillary Clinton’s private server relating to the 2012 terrorist attack against the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, saying the alarming development makes one wonder “what is contained in the other emails she attempted to wipe from her server.”
According to an Associated Press report, the 30 emails were part of a larger cache of thousands of emails the FBI recovered from the personal email server Clinton maintained in her New York home. Government lawyers told a U.S. district judge that some of the 30 Benghazi-related emails were not part of a previous delivery of messages from Clinton’s server delivered to the State Department.
"Today's disclosure that 30 additional emails about Benghazi were discovered on Hillary Clinton's private server raises additional questions about the more than 30,000 emails she deleted,” Trump’s senior communications adviser Jason Miller said in a statement. “Hillary Clinton swore before a federal court and told the American people she handed over all of her work-related emails. If Clinton did not consider emails about something as important as Benghazi to be work-related, one has to wonder what is contained in the other emails she attempted to wipe from her server."
It will take until the end of next month, the State Department said, for it to complete a review of the thousands of new emails and redact classified information before they are released publicly.
Every single one of these emails was evaluated by the FBI prior to Comey's statement and the decision not to prosecute. The only thing they are working on is evaluation on release to the public.Isgrimnur wrote:The gift that keeps on giving:
Donald Trump's campaign on Tuesday seized on revelations that the FBI has recovered an additional 30 emails from Hillary Clinton’s private server relating to the 2012 terrorist attack against the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, saying the alarming development makes one wonder “what is contained in the other emails she attempted to wipe from her server.”
According to an Associated Press report, the 30 emails were part of a larger cache of thousands of emails the FBI recovered from the personal email server Clinton maintained in her New York home. Government lawyers told a U.S. district judge that some of the 30 Benghazi-related emails were not part of a previous delivery of messages from Clinton’s server delivered to the State Department.
"Today's disclosure that 30 additional emails about Benghazi were discovered on Hillary Clinton's private server raises additional questions about the more than 30,000 emails she deleted,” Trump’s senior communications adviser Jason Miller said in a statement. “Hillary Clinton swore before a federal court and told the American people she handed over all of her work-related emails. If Clinton did not consider emails about something as important as Benghazi to be work-related, one has to wonder what is contained in the other emails she attempted to wipe from her server."
It will take until the end of next month, the State Department said, for it to complete a review of the thousands of new emails and redact classified information before they are released publicly.