

Only messages related to the 2012 attacks on the U.S. Last year, Clinton gave the State Department 55,000 pages of emails that she said pertained to her work as secretary sent from her personal address. She has said the private server had “numerous safeguards.”Ĭlinton’s decision while secretary of state to opt out of a State Department email account has become a political problem for her, as the Republican-led House committee investigating the Benghazi attacks has used the disclosures of her email usage to paint her as secretive and above standard scrutiny.Ĭlinton, campaigning in New Hampshire, said Friday she was aware that the FBI now wanted some of the email to be classified, “but that doesn’t change the fact all of the information in the emails was handled appropriately.”Īsked if she was concerned it was on a private server, she replied, “No.” Taken together, the correspondence provides examples of material considered to be sensitive that Clinton, the front-runner for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination, received on the account run out of her home. The nearly 900 pages of her correspondence released by the State Department also contained several messages that were deemed sensitive but unclassified, detailed her daily schedule and contained information – censored in the documents as released – about the CIA that the government is barred from publicly disclosing. diplomatic facilities in Benghazi that was later classified “secret” at the request of the FBI, according to documents released Friday, underscoring lingering questions about how responsibly she handled sensitive information on a home server. 6 are going through.WASHINGTON > Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton received information on her private email account about the deadly attack on U.S. They'll go through the same thing that people who listened to Donald Trump on Jan. "Lindsey, if you are trying to stir up Republican riots, if you think Republicans are going to riot in the street, Republicans are going to riot in the street, they're not above the law," he said. Scarborough added that while Trump and his supporters believe he is above the law, his supporters certainly are not. "Lindsey is even fine threatening riots, saying, you know, Trump supporters will riot in the streets, there will be violence if he is held to account, if he broke the law." Yet they're fine when Trump riots are actually putting democracy at risk, when they're trying to overturn an election result," he said. "The irony is so rich, these people that talked about riots, Black Lives Matter riots, it's all they talk about. 6 Capitol riot while warning of "riots in the future, coming from Republicans, coming from his party, coming from Trump Donald Trump supporters."

MSNBC host Joe Scarborough, a former Republican Florida lawmaker and ex-Trump ally, called out Graham for downplaying the Jan. Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course. "Top epublicans would rather torch America in violent riots than lose an election or face any accountability for their crimes," he wrote. Bill Pascrell Jr., D-N.J., shared the clip of Graham's warning on his Twitter feed. "Like his recent message to AG Garland suggesting that he could help Garland turn down the 'heat' if only DOJ would back off," he tweeted.Ĭonservative attorney George Conway, a prominent Trump critic, wrote that the former president is "essentially threatening the country with violence if the laws are applied to him." Harvard Law School professor Laurence Tribe compared the post to Trump's message to Garland. "The Raid on my home, Mar-a-Lago, is one of the most egregious assaults on democracy in the history of our Country which is, by the way, going to places, in a very bad way, it has never seen before!" Trump wrote on Saturday. Trump issued a similar message on Truth Social over the weekend. Trump launches Truth Social attack on judge after DOJ releases partial Mar-a-Lago affidavit
