Judge Slams State/DOJ on
Clinton Email Cover-Up!

We just released the transcript of
a major court hearing
(held last week) in which U.S. District Court Judge Royce C.
Lamberth granted significant
new discovery to us on the Clinton email issue (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:14-cv-01242)).
During the hearing, Judge Lamberth specifically raised concerns about a
Clinton email
cache recently discussed in a letter to Senator Charles Grassley
(R-IA) and wants us to “shake
this tree” on this issue.
[J]ust last week, the Senate’s – Senate Finance and Homeland
Security Committees released documents revealing that Clinton IT aide Paul
Combetta copied all but four of the missing emails to a Gmail account that
does not appear to have ever been reconstructed and searched. The court
thinks Judicial Watch ought to shake this tree.
Judge Lamberth also criticized the
State Department’s handling and production of Clinton’s emails in this
case stating, “There is no FOIA [Freedom of Information Act] exemption
for political expedience, nor is there one for bureaucratic
incompetence.”
In the beginning of their oral arguments, lawyers for the State
Department wrongfully stated that we could no longer continue their
discovery. The court stopped
their arguments stone cold:
STATE DEPARTMENT: … it is, of course, Judicial Watch’s burden to
explain to Your Honor why there has been good cause to reopen discovery now
that discovery has closed in this case.
THE COURT: Well, I didn’t close discovery. So your premise is
wrong.
STATE DEPARTMENT: Fair enough, Your Honor. Whether you want to call it
closed or not, it is still —
THE COURT: I didn’t close it. I said I would have a status after they
took this initial discovery, and that’s what I’m doing today. I
didn’t close discovery.
STATE DEPARTMENT: That’s right, Your Honor, but it is still Judicial
Watch’s —
THE COURT: So they don’t need any good cause —
STATE DEPARTMENT: Whether
THE COURT: — Today the good cause continues from whether or not State
was acting in good faith, and I’ll tell you everything they’ve
discovered in this period raises serious questions about what the hell the
State Department’s doing here.
The Court also rejected DOJ and State’s efforts to derail further
Judicial Watch discovery. Judge Lamberth called their arguments
“preposterous” and cited a prior Judicial Watch FOIA case in which he
ordered U.S. Marshals to seize
records from a Clinton administration official in a separate
Judicial Watch lawsuit:
I’ll tell you another thing. I didn’t like in your brief. I’ll
tell you right now upfront. You put in your brief the most preposterous
thing, I thought, in your brief was the very idea that — let me read you
the line. Competitive Enterprise Institute was a case of first impression
and that some District Judge bought that and the Court of Appeals reversed
it. Now, that wasn’t a case of first impression at all. The first
impression with me was a case I had involving Ron Brown and the travel
records of whether or not, in the Commerce Department — and it was a
Judicial Watch case — whether or not the Commerce Department was selling
seats on trade missions, and I had a Deputy Under Secretary of Commerce who
took a box of records home and then they gave a no-records response and, in
the course of that, I found out he had taken the records home and they said
they had no records. I sent marshals over and they got the box at his
house, and I ordered them – the marshals — to seize the records. That
was the first case.
The judge also stated that the government has mishandled this case and
the discovery of information including former Secretary Clinton’s emails
so poorly that we may have the ability to prove the they acted in “bad
faith,” which would entitle Judicial Watch to attorney’s fees.
Judge Lamberth detailed how the State Department “spent three months
from November 2014 trying to make this case disappear,” and that after
discovering the State Department’s actions and omissions, “Now we know
more, but we have even more
questions than answers. So I won’t hold it against Judicial
Watch for expanding their initial discovery request now.”
Judge Lamberth stated his goal was to restore
the public’s faith in their government:
When I authorized discovery back in December, I described my goal: to
rule out egregious government misconduct and vindicate the public’s faith
in the State and Justice Departments. That’s still my goal today. This
isn’t a case I relish, but it’s the case before me now, and it’s a
case of the government’s making.”
The court granted us
seven additional depositions, three interrogatories and four document
requests related to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a
private email server. Hillary Clinton and her former top aide and current
lawyer Cheryl Mills were given 30 days to oppose being deposed by Judicial
Watch.
Below is the court’s ruling from the bench granting us significant new
discovery:
First, let me clarify the Government’s misunderstanding. We’re not
reopening discovery here. Discovery never closed. Back in January, I said,
quote, The Government will — the Court will hold a post-discovery hearing
to ascertain the adequacy of State’s searches; to determine if Judicial
Watch needs to depose additional witnesses, including Hillary Clinton or
her former Chief of Staff, Cheryl Mills; and to schedule dispositive
motions, unquote. So June 19th was a checkpoint, not a finish line. And
whether Judicial Watch previously knew about some of the other individuals
it now wants to depose is beside the point. They tailored their initial
discovery request to the facts and questions then before the Court.
Now we know more, but we have even more questions than answers. So I
won’t hold it against Judicial Watch for expanding their initial
discovery request now.
Remember what got us started down this path in the first place. In late
2014 and early 2015, at least some State Department officials knew
Secretary Clinton’s emails were missing; they knew Judicial Watch
didn’t know that; they knew the Court didn’t know that, but the
Department pressed forward trying to settle this case. So, I authorized
discovery into whether these settlement efforts amounted to bad faith.
Now, the Government says, quote, there is simply no factual basis to
justify any further discovery on that subject, unquote, but Judicial
Watch’s most recent submission lays out the following:
It appears that in the middle of 2013, State’s Office of Information
and Program Services launched an inquiry into Clinton’s email
practices.
It appears that in August 2013, that office directed FOIA responders to
stop issuing, quote, no record located, unquote, responses to FOIA requests
for Clinton’s emails.
It appears that by the summer of 2014, State knew a large volume of
Clinton’s emails had never been searched, potentially violating FOIA and
record management obligations. It turns out State had a standing meeting
every Wednesday afternoon during the summer of 2014 to discuss
Clinton-related FOIA inquiries. Attendees included Secretary Kerry’s
Chief of Staff; his Deputy Chief of Staff; the Deputy Secretary for
Management and Resources; the Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs;
several attorneys; and Patrick Kennedy, the Under Secretary for Management.
That’s every Wednesday afternoon.
It appears that in August 2014, State began planning for media
investigations into Clinton’s emails.
It appears that in November 2014, State told Judicial Watch it performed
a legally adequate search and tried to settle. In fact, I think, in my
original opinion on authorizing discovery, I noted that State had given a
draft Vaughn index to Judicial Watch at that time. I don’t think I have
ever seen that, but I think it was given to I think, in my opinion, I said
that it had been given to Judicial Watch. Indeed, State spent the next
three months from November 2014 trying to make this case disappear. They
kept doing it even after they came into the possession of Clinton’s
emails.
Judicial Watch wants to follow up with the State attorney assigned to
this FOIA request to participate in settlement discussions and
negotiations. That seems reasonable to me.
[Judicial Watch] wants to ask the Department official responsible for
overseeing FOIA requests more about why he directed his office to stop
using “no record located” responses to FOIA requests relating to
Clinton’s emails if that, in fact, is what happened. I’m curious,
too.
They want to ask the current Department FOIA overseer more about what
went on in those weekly 2014 meetings. I look forward to hearing what he
says.
They want to ask the Justice Department attorney who led the settlement
negotiations to divulge when he learned Clinton’s emails were missing. He
must answer.
Another reason we had this initial discovery was to see if Secretary
Clinton intentionally attempted to evade FOIA by using a private email.
When Judicial Watch deposed the Deputy Director who oversaw State’s FOIA
responses, he recalled an instance when in — his office found an email
from Clinton’s private account and the Public Affairs team said,
Remember, you’re not supposed to use that email. How can you spin
that?
I agree with Judicial Watch that it’s worth deposing the State
Department records officer who personally reviewed archiving procedures
with Secretary Clinton and her departing staff to see what they
discussed.
I also think Judicial Watch is justified to seek more information about
how Secretary Clinton ultimately determined which emails were public
records and which were private.
The final reason I authorized discovery was to determine whether State
adequately searched for records responsive to Judicial Watch’s FOIA
request. Now the Government seeks to duck behind an unpublished D.C.
Circuit opinion from 2018 holding the Government has already taken every
reasonable action under the Federal Records Act to retrieve Clinton’s
30,000 missing emails and no imaginable enforcement action could recover
any more.
But just last week, the Senate’s — Senate Finance and Homeland
Security Committees released documents revealing Clinton IT aide Paul
Combetta copied all but four of the missing emails to a Gmail account that
does not appear to have ever been reconstructed and searched. The Court
thinks Judicial Watch ought to shake this tree.
And the Court agrees with Judicial Watch that it should talk to three
never-before-deposed State officials who raised concerns about Clinton’s
private email use all the way back to 2009.
There is no FOIA exemption for political expedience, nor is there one
for bureaucratic incompetence.
The Government also tries to say this Court [sic] is — no longer —
or no longer presents a live controversy. This is wrong. Judicial Watch can
still obtain fees if they prove agency bad faith.
I’ll close with this. When I authorized discovery back in December, I
described my goal: to rule out egregious government misconduct and
vindicate the public’s faith in the State and Justice Departments.
That’s still my goal today. This isn’t a case I relish, but it’s the
case before me now, and it’s a case of the government’s making.
The Court authorizes Judicial Watch to take the additional discovery
described in its status report, except for deposing Secretary Clinton and
her Chief of Staff, Cheryl Mills. I will give their attorneys 30 days to
file any additional opposition to their depositions and 10 days thereafter
for Judicial Watch to file any reply, and I’ll issue a separate ruling on
that. Otherwise, the discovery should go forward and all of it should be
completed by December 13th. A status will be held on December 19th at 10:00
a.m. to set a further schedule in this case.
We uncovered new information about the Clinton email scandal that a
federal court agrees requires more answers. We share the court’s
annoyance with DOJ lawyers who continue to defend the indefensible. It is
beyond disturbing that the State and Justice Departments would continue to
try to protect Hillary Clinton and cover up her email scandal. President
Trump should order the agencies to cooperate in uncovering the truth.
The new discovery comes in our July 2014 FOIA lawsuit filed
after the U.S. Department of State failed to respond to a May 13, 2014,
request for:
- Copies of any updates and/or talking points given to Ambassador Rice
by the White House or any federal agency concerning, regarding, or related
to the September 11, 2012 attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi,
Libya.
- Any and all records or communications concerning, regarding, or
relating to talking points or updates on the Benghazi attack given to
Ambassador Rice by the White House or any federal agency.
On December 6, 2018, Judge Lamberth ordered Obama
administration senior State Department officials, lawyers and Clinton aides
to be deposed or answer written questions under oath. The court ruled that
the Clinton email system was “one of the gravest modern offenses to
government transparency.”
The court ordered discovery into three specific areas: whether Secretary
Clinton’s use of a private email server was intended to stymie FOIA;
whether the State Department’s intent to settle this case in late 2014
and early 2015 amounted to bad faith; and whether the State Department has
adequately searched for records responsive to Judicial Watch’s
request.
Our FOIA lawsuit led
directly to the disclosure of the Clinton email system in 2015.
Our discovery over the last several months found many more details about
the scope of the Clinton email scandal and cover-up:
- John Hackett, former Director of Information Programs and Services
(IPS) testifiedunder
oath that he had raised concerns that former Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton’s staff may have “culled out 30,000” of the secretary’s
“personal” emails without following strict National Archives standards.
He also revealed that he believed there was interference with the formal
FOIA review process related to the classification of Clinton’s
Benghazi-related emails.
- Heather Samuelson, Clinton’s White House liaison at the State
Department, and later Clinton’s personal lawyer, admittedunder
oath that she was granted immunity by the Department of Justice in June
2016.
- Justin Cooper, former aide to President Bill Clinton and Clinton
Foundation employee who registered the domain name of the unsecure comserver
that Clinton used while serving as Secretary of State, testified he
worked with Huma Abedin, Clinton’s deputy chief of staff, to create the
non-government email system.
- In the interrogatory
responsesof E.W. (Bill) Priestap, assistant director of the FBI
Counterintelligence Division, he stated that the agency found Clinton email
records in the Obama White House, specifically, the Executive Office of the
President.
- Jacob “Jake” Sullivan, Clinton’s senior advisor and deputy chief
of staff when she was secretary of state, testifiedthat
both he and Clinton used her unsecure non-government email system to
conduct official State Department business.
- Eric Boswell, former assistant secretary of state for diplomatic
security during Clinton’s tenure as secretary of state, testifiedthat
Clinton was warned twice against using unsecure BlackBerry’s and personal
emails to transmit classified material.
We are, of course, grateful that a federal judge sees through the
charade perpetrated by these high-ranking officials. I’ll be sure to
update as the case continues to progress.
Virginia’s Lieutenant Governor Clams Up on Assault
Allegations
Politicians like to retreat inside their shells when they’re accused
of wrongdoing but the law, thankfully, requires transparency to help ensure
the truth comes out.
We filed a Virginia Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against
Lt. Governor Justin Fairfax and his office for documents about rape
allegations against Fairfax (Judicial
Watch et al. v. Justin E. Fairfax et al. (No. 2019
11833)).
We asked for the records in June 2019, but the Lt. Governor’s office
refused to release them, describing them as “working papers” and
“personnel records” exempt from disclosure.
In February 2019, two women accused Lt. Governor Fairfax of sexual
assault and rape. Dr. Vanessa C. Tyson, a professor at Scripps College, accused Fairfax
of sexually assaulting her at the 2004 Democratic National Convention in
Boston, and Meredith Watson accused Fairfax
of raping her while attending Duke University with him in 2000.
After the women came forward, Fairfax’s policy director Adele
McClure resigned, and
Fairfax himself stepped
down from his position at the international law firm Morrison &
Foerster LLP..
It speaks volumes that Lt. Governor Fairfax refuses to produce even one
document about his handling of the rape allegations against him.
Ilhan Omar Declares Support for Terrorist
Financier
Ilhan Omar, a freshman Democrat congressman from Minnesota, has been in
the news recently – for all the wrong reasons. Our Corruption
Chronicles blog has the latest astonishing details.
A controversial Minnesota congresswoman known for racially
inflammatory anti-Semitic views has publicly declared her support
for a terrorist organization in her native Somalia. Democrat Ilhan
Omar is demanding that a telecommunications company founded and
operated by a renowned terrorist financier, receive protection from that
country’s government and peacekeeping forces. An Israeli-based newspaper
broke the story a few days ago, but the American mainstream media
has been notably silent on the matter.
The company, Hormuud Telecommunications, was created and is operated by
Ahmed Nur Ali Jim’ale, a chief financier of
al–Shabaab, an east African-based jihadist group that
serves as Al Qaeda’s affiliate in Somalia. In her social media account,
Omar writes that Somalia’s government and peacekeeping forces need to
protect Hormuud and the Somali telecom industry as they make enormous
contributions to the economy and provide vital services. “During my visit
to Somalia in 2011, I was surprised by the quick evolution of technology in
Somalia,” Omar posts, indirectly praising the telecom firm with terrorist
ties. The Israeli article includes the links to a pair of United Nations
Security Council reports documenting Hormuud’s direct support for
al-Shabaab.
According to the first U.N. report: “Ali
Ahmed Nur Jim’ale (Jim’ale) has served in leadership roles with
the former Somali Council of Islamic Courts, also known as the Somali
Islamic Courts Union, which was a radical-Islamist element.
The most radical elements of the Somali Islamic Courts
Union eventually formed the group known as
al–Shabaab.” The document also
identifies Jim’ale, a prominent businessman who controls Hormuud, as one
of al-Shabab’s chief financiers. “Hormuud Telecommunications is a
company identified as being one of the single largest financiers of
al-Shabaab, which includes large lump sum payments
to al-Shabaab in the hundreds
of thousands of dollars and these payments
toal-Shabaab were facilitated
by Jim’ale,” the U.N. report says, adding that
“Hormuud Telecommunications has provided key material and logistical
support to al-Shabaab to include weapons, private fighters, and
ammunition.”
The second U.N. Security Council report,
published last year, links a terror attack that killed hundreds in 2017 to
Hormuud. The event is described as the deadliest terror attack in
Somalia’s history, carried out with a large vehicle-borne improvised
explosive device. “Two employees of the principal
Somali telecommunications provider, Hormuud Telecom Somalia Inc., were
also prosecuted in connection with the attack, for facilitating the entry
of the large vehicle-borne improvised explosive device through the Sinka
Dheere checkpoint on the outskirts of Mogadishu,” according to the U.N.
report.
Considering this documented history of terrorist activity, it’s
outrageous that Hormuud is endorsed by a member of the United States
Congress. Omar has been plagued by controversy since becoming one of the
first—along with Michigan Democrat Rashida Tlaib—Muslim women elected
to Congress. The mainstream media has praised the legislators for being
part of a “historic
freshmen class with more women and minorities than ever.” The reality
is that there is more than enough credible information for the Department
of Justice (DOJ), Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) to open criminal investigations into Omar. Back in
July Judicial Watch filed an ethics
complaint with the U.S. House of Representatives Office of
Congressional Ethics calling for a full investigation into potential crimes
tied to allegations that Omar may have married her biological brother.
In the complaint Judicial Watch documents substantial, compelling and
unrefuted evidence that Omar may have committed the following crimes in
violation of both federal law and Minnesota state law: perjury, immigration
fraud, marriage fraud, state and federal tax fraud and federal student loan
fraud. At the very least, such violations constitute a breach of the Code
of Ethics for Government Service which subject officeholders to a higher
standard.
I encourage you to share your views in Rep. Omar’s ethics issues with
your congressmen. You can reach them at 202-225-3121.
Until next week …

Tom Fitton
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