JUST IN: Hillary Clinton and Her Team Have Lost Their Security Clearance!
According to reports, Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has given up her security clearance in the wake of the scandal of her mishandling of classified emails.
Hillary Clinton has given up her security clearance in the wake of the scandal over her handling of secret information on her email server, the Senate Judiciary committee revealed Friday.
Chairman Charles E. Grassley also revealed top Clinton aide Cheryl Mills and four others no longer have clearance.
Mrs. Clintons clearance expired at the end of August. The others lost their access privileges in September.
The state department, in a letter to Mr. Grassley, had said Mrs. Clinton and her aids retained clearance in order to conduct research after she left office.
The names of the four additional aids besides Ms. Mills were redacted from the state department letter that the committee released.
You can read the letter from the State Department below:
The Honorable Charles Grassley, Chairman Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate Washington, D.C. 20510 Dear Mr. Chairman United States Department of State Washington, D.C. 20520 SEP E Int Asa follow-up to our letter of May 23, 2017, in response to the Committee's letter of March 30, 2017, we would like to provide you with an update on the status of former Secretary Clinton's security clearance and the ongoing administrative review pertaining to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and other current and former Department officials. At her request, former Secretary Clinton's security clearance was administratively withdrawn on August 30, 2018. Oriember 202,018 securi clearances were admirynstivel withdrawn for Cheryl Mills, d As we previously informed the committee, these individuals had been granted access to classified information through a request made by Secretary Clinton designating them as researchers, per E.O. 13526, Sec. 4.4(a)(2). With regard to the administrative review we described in our May 2017 letter, the Department has received tem of thousands of documents in that process, and those documents have been reviewed for classified content. A subset of documents identified as containing classified information was then reviewed by Diplomatic Security. All identified and valid security incidents contained in those documents have been forwarded to the Bureau of Diplomatic Security's Office of Personnel Security and Suitability (DS/F'S S), to be placed in the official security file of individuals identified in that review as having valid security incidents. All valid security incidents are reviewed by DS and taken into account every time an individual's eligibility for access to classified information is considered. The Department's Bureau of Administration (A) is completing its extensive FOR review of the remaining documents received from the FBI. There is a court order to finish the production of these documents by September 28, 2018. The A Bureau reviews the records before DS because they identify agency records and determine the current classification of documents. These records have been released on a monthly basis on the Department's FOR website. We have been providing a link to these documents to your staff as they are posted and will continue to do so. After the A Bureau completes its review and assessment of the current classification of the remaining records, DS will begin the investigative process to determine if they are valid security DISCLOSURE AUTHORIZED BY THE CHAIRMAN OF THE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE DISCLOSURE AUTHORIZED BY THE CHAIRMAN OF THE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE incidents. This is a two-step process. The first step the contemporaneous classification review will begin upon receipt of the last set of emails. The second step DS's review and adjudication process will begin once the contemporaneous classification review is completed.
We request that you protect the information in this letter, as it is not public and generally not appropriate for public release. Therefore, we note that the public release of any portion of the enclosed information is not authorized by this communication and, should you wish to disclose any portions thereof, we ask that you provide the Department with a reasonable opportunity to inform the Committee of any sensitive information that should be safe-guarded. The Department will provide your Committee with further updates on the ongoing administrative review as it progresses. Sincerely, dda.- iF24/1-0 Charles S. Faulkner Acting Assistant Secretary Legislative Affairs