Start at 16:00:
So her excuse for her felonious action is that she was too stupid to understand what classified info was. Perfect material for President!
It depends on what the meaning of ‘is’ is…
Via Fox:
Clinton has repeatedly denied sending or receiving any then-classified information on her personal account. Clinton campaign spokesman Nick Merrill repeated that denial to Fox News late Tuesday, saying “She did not send nor receive any emails that were marked classified at the time. We want to ensure that appropriate procedures are followed as these emails are reviewed while not unduly delaying the release of her emails. We want that to happen as quickly and as transparently as possible.”
Merrill’s denial that Clinton sent emails “marked classified at the time” contradicts her claim to reporters in March that no classified material, retroactive or otherwise, had ever passed through the private account.
“I did not e-mail any classified material to anyone on my e-mail. There is no classified material,” Clinton said at the time. “I’m certainly well-aware of the classification requirements and did not send classified material.”
The Post also reported that the server installed in Clinton’s New York home just prior to her becoming secretary of state was originally used by her 2008 presidential campaign, and replaced a server that former president Bill Clinton had been using. According to the paper, the server originally used by Bill Clinton was deemed to be too small to accommodate the correspondence of a sitting Cabinet official.
Responsibility for the first server was held by a longtime Bill Clinton aide with no security clearance and no expertise at safeguarding computers. Bryan Pagliano, a former IT director for Clinton’s 2008 campaign, was brought into oversee the second server. He was paid by a political action committee tied to Clinton through April 2009, when he was hired by the State Department as an IT specialist.
The Post report, citing people briefed on the server setup, described it as occasionally unreliable, going down for days after Superstorm Sandy struck the New York area in October 2012
She also hired a Denver IT company to help maintain the server in 2013 which company also didn’t have security clearance.
