Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

Bureaucrats can’t run but they can hide, and it’s time to stop them – Washington Examiner

Former Attorney General Loretta Lynch set aside ethical norms and good judgment to take her secret, election-year meeting with former Present Bill Clinton at an Arizona airport. Her agency was investigating Clinton's wife, Hillary, and pondering the permutations of prosecuting her as she ran for president.

In doing so, she paved the way for then-FBI Director James Comey to take unprecedented decision-making power in the investigation of Hillary Clinton's emails.

She also plunged her department and the White House into a panic when a local reporter got wind of the meeting. We finally know a bit more about it, thanks to a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit pursued by the American Center for Law and Justice.

After an unjustifiable 12 months of resisting compliance with the Freedom of Information Act, the Justice Department has finally handed over correspondence between the FBI, the Justice Department, and White House officials about how they should handle the fallout from Lynch's meeting. Among the findings was the fact that Lynch used a pseudonymous email address.

This is not the first recent case of federal officials doing so, nor of FOIA requests being unnecessarily delayed and litigated to cover up political wrongdoing, nor, most importantly, of documents being redacted for no reason other than to avoid embarrassment.

The bottom line is that government transparency is becoming a joke, and the joke is on all of us.

Recall that Hillary Clinton used a private email account and failed contemporaneously to hand over government records she thus created. This allowed her to thwart valid FOIA requests for years, and to stonewall a congressional inquiry. In a case similar to Lynch's, former EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson went by the alias "Richard Windsor." Although both Jackson and Lynch claim that FOIA compliance officers in their agencies were aware of their aliases, was every one of them really aware of it? There is room for doubt. Was there any way to guarantee that future FOIA officers would have this information so they could respond within the law when their records were searched in the future?

Problems with FOIA go beyond efforts by senior officials to hide their identity or their correspondence from public scrutiny. It is equally if not more concerning that the Justice Department, as often occurs with politically sensitive FOIA requests, improperly dragged its feet to thwart the ACLJ's valid request for the emails about Lynch's meeting with Clinton.

Not only did the department force the matter into unnecessary litigation that has lasted nearly a year but also imposed ridiculous and unjustified redactions that exceed permitted exemptions to the Freedom of Information Act.

Talking points that DOJ wrote and sent to the White House Office of Political Affairs were completely blacked out on the basis of a b(5) exemption, which is designed to protect "inter-agency or intraagency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency."

According to DOJ's guidance on FOIA's b(5) exemption, courts have interpreted this to "exempt those documents, and only those documents that are normally privileged in the civil discovery context." It is absurd to suggest that draft media talking points, written in a panic and sent to the White House to facilitate political damage control, would qualify as exempt from discovery in a civil court case. But the b(5) exemption has been so badly abused in other contexts that it is casually referred to as "the withhold-it-because-you-want-to exemption." This indicates a much bigger problem.

President Obama famously failed to keep his promise that his administration would presume in favor of disclosure wherever there was doubt. Instead he ran an administration that set new records for non-compliance with FOIA. As a result, Congress stepped in last year with a reform bill, which Obama did at least sign, to create a statutory presumption of disclosure. But even this has failed to change officials' habits, which always seek to conceal embarrassing details as long as possible.

Congress needs to fix FOIA, because it has become a sick and ironic joke. If bureaucrats refuse to preserve and deliver requested documents in a timely fashion as the law requires, perhaps all of their communications should by default be made available online after 30 days, with exemptions applied for on a case-by-case basis and subject to court challenge. The federal bureaucracy's obstinate non-compliance with valid requests justifies extreme measures. This is the entrenched civil service acting against the public interest and the law to shield itself and its political masters from detection in wrongdoing.

We hope that Lynch's case, with all the others over the years, helps convince Congress to go back to the drawing board on FOIA. Add tougher penalties, place stricter limits on exemptions, tighten regulations for government use of email. Do whatever is necessary. But make clear that no one is above the law, and make the federal government truly transparent to the public it exists to serve.

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Bureaucrats can't run but they can hide, and it's time to stop them - Washington Examiner

Clinton email case far from closure as FBI hands over more classified documents to State – Washington Times

The Hillary Clinton email fiasco isnt ending anytime soon, with State Department officials saying they have no idea when they will finish sorting though and releasing the previously hidden messages.

More classified documents that the former secretary of state improperly handled keep coming to light.

The Trump administration doesnt even know if it has hunted down every trace of the emails that Mrs. Clinton a former first lady, U.S. senator, top diplomat and Democratic presidential nominee sent from a secret email server stashed in her home.

At this time, we do not have an estimate for completion of processing all of these documents, a State Department official told The Washington Times.

In February 2016, the State Department completed a review of the roughly 30,000 emails that Mrs. Clinton turned over in December 2014, nearly two years after she left office.

The FBI last summer gave the State Department tens of thousands of additional emails from its investigation, which the department continues to process pursuant to court orders.

This June, the FBI provided approximately 7,000 additional documents recovered from the laptop computer shared by top Clinton aide Huma Abedin and her husband, Anthony Weiner, whose habitual sexting cost him a seat in Congress, the mayoral election in New York and ultimately his marriage to Ms. Abedin.

We have not yet determined how many of these documents are State Department records as opposed to personal emails, nor have we determined how many documents are duplicative of material already in our possession, said the official.

The painstaking review continues to uncover classified information that was stored on the insecure server that shielded Mrs. Clintons official correspondence from public and congressional oversight.

A batch of Mrs. Clintons email released this month included at least two with confidential information. That brings the total number of confidential documents that passed through Mrs. Clintons unsecured server to 2,083.

One from Ms. Abedin was nearly completely redacted because it would reveal foreign relations or foreign activities of the United States, including confidential sources, according to clarification markings.

An email from Dennis Ross, who was a U.S. envoy to the Middle East, was redacted of confidential information regarding an Israeli military offensive in November 2012 against Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip. It included discussions regarding cease-fire negotiations.

Mrs. Clinton, whose secret email account was discovered by a congressional probe of the 2012 Benghazi attack, handed over about 30,000 messages to the State Department in December 2014.

She erased another 32,000 messages that she deemed personal. At some point, she wiped clean the email server, preventing any of the messages from being recovered.

The fight for transparency in Mrs. Clintons emails has broken major ground in open-records laws, and more legal battles are still to come.

The conservative legal group Judicial Watch, which has been at the forefront of the fight to make the emails public, has at least nine Freedom of Information Act lawsuits pending.

The group scored a legal victory last week when District Court Judge Amit P. Mehta ordered the State Department to expand its search for Mrs. Clintons emails related to the terrorist attack on a U.S. diplomatic outpost in Benghazi, Libya.

Mrs. Clinton was head of the State Department when heavily armed militants killed four Americans, including Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens.

Suspicions of a cover-up emerged when the Obama administration initially downplayed the attack in the run-up to the 2012 presidential election. Susan E. Rice, ambassador to the United Nations, claimed repeatedly that the attack was the culmination of a spontaneous riot over a YouTube video that mocked the Prophet Muhammad.

The State Department now must search its servers for email accounts of Mrs. Clintons top aides Cheryl Mills, Jacob Sullivan and Ms. Abedin.

Its not about politics. Its just about finding the truth as to what happened, said Ramona Cotca, a senior attorney for Judicial Watch.

The legal battles over the email have persisted despite the change of administration.

It may actually be slower, Ms. Cotca said.

Donald Trump made Mrs. Clintons email scandal a top campaign issue when she was the Democratic presidential nominee.

On the campaign trail, Mr. Trump vowed to appoint a special counsel to investigate Mrs. Clinton. He backed off that promise once elected, saying he didnt want to hurt the Clintons and that she had already suffered greatly.

He changed his tune again as special counsel Robert Mueller intensified the investigation into Russian interference in the election and accusations of Trump campaign collusion.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions has taken a VERY weak position on Hillary Clinton crimes (where are E-mails & DNC server) & Intel leakers! the president said last month in a Twitter post.

The White House did not respond to questions about the slow pace of the Clinton email search.

A Justice Department spokesman also declined to respond to the criticism but said the agency would soon submit a status report to updating the court on the Freedom of Information Act search.

The slower the State Department processes and produces these records, the longer it will take us. But well just keep at it, said Ms. Cotca. We would like to see an end in sight. I would.

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Clinton email case far from closure as FBI hands over more classified documents to State - Washington Times

Hillary Clinton Losing to Trump Was Like Jesus’s Crucifixion, According to Her Pastor – Newsweek

After Hillary Clinton lost the presidential election to Donald Trump last November, she went hikingand she also turned to religion. That included gettinga pep talk from her pastor.

The ReverendBill Shillady revealed this week that he sent an email to Clinton the morning after the election, and ittalked about Good Friday, the day on which Christians believe Jesus Christ was crucified. According to a copy of the letter posted by CNN, Shillady acknowledged that "this is not the devotional you wish to receive this day," but he took her through the story nonetheless.

Related: Trump supporters rib Hillary Clinton for calling election memoir What Happened

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"For the disciples and Christ's followers in the first century, Good Friday represented the day that everything fell apart. All was lost. The momentum and hope of a man claiming to be the Son of God, the Messiah who was supposed to change everything, had been executed," Shillady wrote. "Even though Jesus told his followers three days later the temple would be restored, they had no idea of what that Sunday would be. They betrayed, denied, mourned, fled and hid. They did just about everything BUT feel good about Friday and their circumstances."

Shillady told Clinton that sheand the nation, which ultimately gave her the popular votewas in the middle of such a Friday but needed to hold on.

"Our hope is that Sunday is coming. But it might well be hell for a while," he wrote.

Clinton identifies as a Methodist, and she's previously said that her religious upbringing helped her personaldevelopment. Shillady, the executive director of the United Methodist City Society in New York, and Clinton met in2002, according to the Associated Press, and they became fast friends. The pastor attendedboth her daughter's wedding and her mother's memorial. During last year's campaign, he wrote her daily devotionals.

He's recently collected those messages intoStrong for a Moment Like This, due out next week. Clinton wrote the foreword for the book, which,according to the publisher's website, includes 365 devotions "along with personal notes, portions of her speechesand headlines that provide context."

As for Clinton, Shillady said she's finally reaching her proverbial Sundaywhich, as he told McClatchy DC, may even include a stint preaching.

"She's the most relaxed I've ever seen her, having fun with her grandchildren. I think she'll continue to speak out on issues that are important to her, on women and gender and children's health," Shillady told CNN. "'Sunday' is not another election for her. She's moving on with her life."

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Hillary Clinton Losing to Trump Was Like Jesus's Crucifixion, According to Her Pastor - Newsweek

Hillary Clinton’s ‘Pastor’ Says Former Presidential Candidate Considering ‘Occasionally’ Preaching – Christian News Network

Photo Credit: Bill Shillady

NEW YORK In speaking to reporters about theupcoming release of his compilation of devotionals written for Hillary Clinton throughout her presidential candidacy, Bill Shillady revealed that Clinton is now considering preaching on occasion as a layperson.

Shillady, who serves as the executive director of the United Methodist City Society and identifies as the pastor of the Clinton family, told reportersthis past week that he emailed devotionals to Clinton every day from the time that she announced her candidacy. The devotionals have been compiled into a book entitled Strong for a Moment Like This, scheduled to be released on Aug. 15.

It was really just a movement of the Spirit, Shillady claimed to the News & Observer. I didnt know how difficult the campaign was going to be, or how contentious. I just thought it would help her to have a Scripture, and a meditation on that Scripture, and a prayer each day.

She knows the Bible remarkably well, and I think she knows what passages to turn to when she needs inspiration or solace, he also told CNN. She reads her Scripture every day. That, for her, is a practice of spiritual discipline. She told me that my email was the first she opened every day and and it helped keep her grounded and centered.

He said that since losing the presidential election, Clinton has been taking walks in the woods and spending time thinking and praying. When asked if she might be led to the pulpit next, Shillady said that Clinton had actually mentioned that possibility to him.

He noted that United Methodists have a practice of allowing laypersons to speak, and that Clinton is considering that option.

We were having a photo shoot for the book and chatting about preaching and she said, Bill, I think Id like to preach,' Shillady outlined. In United Methodism, theres a tradition of having lay people preach from the pulpit, and I think shes going to look at occasionally doing that and sharing the good news without it being a politically charged environment.

He further advised on Fox News on Sunday that Clinton will not be seeking ordination.

She knows her Methodist history. She would be a good expositor of the Bible, Shilladay opined to the News & Observer. The way she has advocated for the disenfranchised and the poor in our nation stems from her Methodist upbringing and her understanding of the Methodist heritage of being a member of society and caring for others. And talk about life experience. She could write her own book about that.

However, many opposed Clinton during the presidential election because her pro-homosexual, pro-abortion beliefsrun contrary to the word of God.

In a nutshell, heres why I cannot vote for Hillary Clinton, wrote Bryan Ridenour in 2014 on his blog America, Look Up. I hate the radical departure from holiness that our country continues to take, all while people stand by and cheer our progress. God loathes homosexuality (not the homosexual) and yet many in America embrace homosexual marriage. Is God pleased? Ask Sodom and Gomorrah.

We slaughter over one million babies per year in the womb. The numbers staggering. Are Christians supposed to remain mum about this tragic court approved holocaust? Is God pleased if we just look the other way? Is God pro-choice? he asked. When a candidate idolizes Margaret Sanger and is a darling of Emilys List, Conservatives need to run, not walk, in the other direction.

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Hillary Clinton's 'Pastor' Says Former Presidential Candidate Considering 'Occasionally' Preaching - Christian News Network

Obama, Clinton call for introspection in wake of Charlottesville clashes – Politico

President Barack Obama, seen here visiting Nelson Mandela's prison cell on Robben Island in South Africa in 2013, quoted the late South African leader in a tweet Saturday night.

Democratic leaders responded to reports of violence and racial clashes at a white nationalist rally in Virginia on Saturday with calls for introspection on matters of racial hatred.

Former President Barack Obama sent a rare tweet Saturday night quoting civil rights icon and anti-apartheid revolutionary Nelson Mandela in an apparent response to the violence in Charlottesville, stressing that "love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite."

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Obama, who has largely strayed from making public comments since exiting the White House in January, took to Twitter on a day mired by racial violence and tension in the state of Virginia, including the mayhem caused by a car barreling into a crowd of protesters.

"No one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin or his background or his religion. People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite," the former president wrote in a series of tweets, quoting from Mandela's autobiography, "Long Walk to Freedom."

Hillary Clinton, Obama's former secretary of state and the 2016 Democratic presidential nominee, chimed in on Twitter by calling on political leaders to "to be strong in their words & deliberate in their actions" in the face of Saturday's upheaval.

"The incitement of hatred that got us here is as real and condemnable as the white supremacists in our streets.," Clinton tweeted. "Every minute we allow this to persist through tacit encouragement or inaction is a disgrace, & corrosive to our values."

Former Vice President Al Gore took a more blunt approach, directly criticizing President Donald Trump's response to the violent clashes,

Mr. President, for the sake of your country, I would urge you to try again, Gore said in response to Trump's address on the matter. Mr. President, I would urge you to give more thought to what it means to have a resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan and Nazi movement marching and creating this kind of hatefulness.

He added: The country would be better served if the President would come back before the people and think of a more thoughtful and appropriate statement about how we can understand whats going on in American and how we go forward.

Hundreds of protesters clashed with white supremacists during a rally in Virginia, resulting in the death of a woman and injuries to dozens more. Two state police troopers were killed when their helicopter crashed on the outskirts of town. The rally, held to protest the planned removal of a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, is believed to be the largest gathering of white nationalists in over a decade, according to The Associated Press.

The driver of the vehicle that plowed into the crowd was identified as James Alex Fields Jr. of Ohio. He was charged with second-degree murder and other charges, according to the AP.

Trump addressed the violence from his golf resort in New Jersey on Saturday, saying he condemned in "the strongest possible terms this degree of hatred, bigotry and violence, on many sides" in display in Virginia, adding that he found the situation "very, very sad."

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Obama, Clinton call for introspection in wake of Charlottesville clashes - Politico