Posted on 11/03/2016 5:28:51 AM PDT by randita
Is the Abedin/Weiner Laptop the Last of It?
There is much evidence that the Clinton e-mails investigation was never properly pursued.
By Andrew C. McCarthy November 3, 2016
A nagging question has been lost amid the tempest over the FBIs revival of the Clinton e-mails investigation. As everyone knows, the file has been reopened because of a trove of e-mails found on a laptop shared by top Clinton aide Huma Abedin and her estranged husband, Anthony Weiner. What we dont know, however, is: Why has the FBI only recently learned about a computer used by Ms. Abedin?
Remember, Abedin is said to have cooperated in the Clinton e-mails investigation and sat for a lengthy interview with FBI agents. The agents asked her about her e-mail practices. Assuming they asked basic questions, as agents are trained to do, they would have methodically itemized the computers and e-mail accounts she used. Yet, the Abedin/Weiner computer, which is said to contain 650,000 e-mails (an unknown number of which are relevant to the Clinton investigation), was not acquired by the bureau in connection with the Clinton investigation. It was seized in an unrelated investigation of Weiner, reportedly involving his alleged sexting with a teenage minor.
Why did the FBI agents on the Clinton e-mails investigation fail to acquire and search this computer months earlier? The question becomes more pressing in light of the Washington Examiners report that the FBI failed to ask not only Abedin but other Clinton aides to surrender their computers, smartphones, or other communications devices.
Now, there could be a good explanation, at least in connection with some Clinton aides. If, after a reasonably thorough investigation, the FBI had found no indication that potentially classified information was transmitted or stored on a particular device, thered be no need to seize it. Lets say X is a Clinton staffer. Lets also say the FBI finds that X appears only to have used her government e-mail account for official business; that X did not have an account on the clintonemail.com domain; that whenever Clinton or other government officials e-mailed X, they addressed the e-mail to Xs state.gov account; and that X was cooperative when interviewed and convincingly said she never used her private e-mail for government business. Under those circumstances, it would be reasonable not to ask for the surrender of Xs private cellphone or computers.
Lets now consider, though, the case we actually have. Several Clinton staffers appear to have sent and received e-mails about government business on private devices and private e-mail accounts. A number of those e-mail exchanges involved classified intelligence. It seems like a no-brainer to me that these devices should have been seized and searched.
Why was this not done? There are at least four reasons, none of them good.
First, the Obama Justice Department under Loretta Lynch denied the FBIs Clinton e-mails investigators access to the grand jury. The grand jurys power to compel production of evidence and testimony is the source of much of the FBIs power to convince people to be cooperative. Defanged by DOJ, investigators were forced to negotiate and cajole when they should have been able to demand. That makes it much harder to investigate. It undoubtedly drummed into the agents the message that they should not press too many requests for the voluntary surrender of items the owners would not want to part with and no one wants to give up personal laptops and smartphones. If a request made by an agent was denied, the agent could have no confidence that the Justice Department would back him.
Second, the Good Ship Clinton overflows with lawyers. It is also very close to the Obama Justice Department (many Obama-administration lawyers were once Clinton-administration lawyers). Lawyers know that the FBI worries about being accused of violating attorney-client privileged communications. They also know that the Obama Justice Department is indulgent of extravagant claims about what the attorney-client privilege shields from disclosure. Lawyers devices are thus a big hassle for agents, and they no doubt shy away from asking for them unless its patently necessary (as it was, for example, with the laptops of Cheryl Mills and Heather Samuelson, since those computers were used to store and vet all of Hillary Clintons e-mails). And when you start shying away from seeking access to the computers of important subjects (such as Mills) because you dont want to deal with lawyer complications, it becomes much easier to rationalize not seeking the devices of other subjects. Once it is established by habit that obtaining computers is not a priority, you stop asking.
Third, its never good to compartmentalize an investigation. In this case, the classified e-mails investigation has apparently been severed from the Clinton Foundation investigation, as if they were completely separate and unrelated. When obviously related matters are joined together, there is a broader basis to demonstrate probable cause that evidentiary items, such as computers, are relevant and should be seized. But that advantage is lost when what should be one investigation is divided into two or more. If you are an agent investigating the classified e-mails case, you are not going to make efforts to acquire a computer that might be very relevant to the Clinton Foundation investigation but only marginally tied to the classified-information probe. When an investigation is artificially carved up, agents do not see the big picture: Things that ought to be acquired end up falling through the cracks.
Fourth and finally, there is the enervating effect of working on an investigation that agents strongly suspect is not going to result in charges. Even as the agents on the classified-information investigation gradually assembled compelling evidence, they had to know that the president and the Justice Department were very unenthusiastic about the case. President Obama talked the investigation down, going out of his way to say Mrs. Clinton would never do anything to harm national security. Justice Department officials leaked the same message to the press.
Put yourself in the shoes of FBI agents who witness things theyve never seen before: subjects of the investigation given immunity from prosecution and then allowed to appear as lawyers for other subjects; Justice Department lawyers more accommodating of defense lawyers than of FBI agents; witnesses who lie to the FBI given immunity rather than being arrested and squeezed for cooperation. The agents see the handwriting on the wall that their hard work is going to come to nothing. An agent no doubt asks himself: Why should I push to acquire this computer? If DOJ wanted me to have it, theyd let me subpoena it; if they wanted to make the case, some of these suspects would already be in cuffs.
This is an understandable attitude, but its not an acceptable one. The FBI is not just the nations premier investigative agency; it is also our domestic-security service. Wholly apart from whether a computer contains evidence that can be used to prosecute a case, that computer has become a threat to national security if as a private device that is not hardened against espionage and operates on networks that are not hardened against espionage it is likely to contain classified information. Even if no one is indicted, the hacking or dissemination of the intelligence on the computer could damage national security.
The reports of the FBIs investigation that have been made public indicate that there could be dozens of computers and other communications devices which may be storing classified information, but which the FBI has neither seized nor made plans to try to obtain. If that is true, it is inexplicable. That the Justice Department and senior FBI officials have adopted a theory that undermines prosecution of crimes involving mishandling of intelligence is beside the point.
It also raises another question: Is the Abedin/Weiner laptop the last one? Or will late discoveries continue to rock Camp Clinton and roil our politics?
Andrew C. McCarthy is a senior policy fellow at the National Review Institute and a contributing editor of National Review.
I heard that another company said....Hey, we do that, too.
They can’t testify against each other. .......Just like Bubba and Hillary.
They can’t be forced to testify against each other.
Voluntarily, yes.
Weiner has his own problems with the sexting. Will he spill what he knows to get out from under the sexting?
I essentially said voting for her, after acknowledging all that she has done, is unethical. It basically says that you dont care that shes a criminal.
Voting for someone you know is corrupt because of ideology is putting ideology above liberty.
A corrupt president puts everyone’s liberty at risk. You lose your liberty and ideology won’t matter.
The Clintons’ saga will be revealed in 10 or 15 books to be published over the next decade.
As insurance, should Trump actually win, Barry better better pardon Bill for all past, present, and future crimes because I believe that a just Justice Dept will bring the whole crime family down. ‘Just’ not as it was with Bush, but ‘just’ as in ‘equal justice for all!’
If they actually DO get Hillary on something, I think after she’s tried and convicted there will be an avalanche of new information come out about old things from people who no longer feel the Ebolarkansas Virus.
Well said, and absolutely correct.
The Wikileaks dumps of her Goldman Sachs speeches and other foreign policy speeches read like something that you'd hear from a corporate globalist who wears a dog collar around her neck and is led around on a leash by here Wall Street handlers.
A lot of people -- liberals and conservatives alike -- have this idea that she's running to continue Obama's legacy in the White House. That's simply not true at all. She's running to pick up where the Bush administration left off in 2008, carrying out endless Wall Street wars all over the globe.
Fox News is reporting that FBI agents REFUSED to destroy Cheryl Mills’ laptop, and that it is now being “exploited”.
Direct testimony is probably of little value at this point anyway. Once the police had access to the computer of one spouse, they probably had all the information they needed.
The only way this ends is one minute after the firing squad ejects their spent casings.
I do believe there's more.
McCarthy on FOX news yesterday .....
Waiting to hear from Rudy. But wouldn’t be surprised if he went silent.....until he’s Attorney General.
For six months Corporate media has had one job,make Trump look as bad as Hildabeast. My fervent prayer is not enough people
bought it.
There are a number of others who vote the ‘elitist’ vote. Many look down their noses at the working class, see them as ill-informed gun-loving yahoos and religious zealots, and believe that Harvard, Princeton, Yale etc. should be producing the ‘leaders’ of the nation. They buy into the elitist culture around Washington - including the cabal of celebrity politicians, entertainers, and media people. Some of these people truly hate the idea that this ‘elitist’ culture, and central urban culture, could ever be viewed as not superior to ‘middle’ America. There's a reason why the term ‘fly over’ country exists. Amongst some, this disdain is so deep that they would vote for Charles Manson rather than allow equality with those they look down upon. Add to this that segment of women who want to stick it to men in a general way (yes, they do exist), irrespective of right and wrong, and you have a good chunk of Hillary voters.
One has to remember the FBI were not allowed to use search warrants nor subpoenas in search of evidence earlier. EVerything was turned over voluntarily as the CLinton people chose. HIllary as not deposed under oath. This is a different situation even though Lynch and the Justice Department are doing everything they can to squash it.
By and large the public doesn’t care about corruption and malfeasance. Even on a grand scale. Too complicated for the masses and not perceived as relevant to their daily lives.
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