Published by Chief Editor, Sammy Campbell. Researched by Mark Pullen.
6/2018 We reviewed the Inspector General’s report on the FBI’s handling of the Hillary Clinton investigation. The first point of fact is the investigation wasn’t an email and computer server investigation. It was an investigation into the handling of classified information. Jonathan Moffa’s closed-door testimony piqued our interest to revisit the Inspector General’s report. We confirmed what we had already known from our first review. See Moffa’s testimony below.
We found two discrepancies in the report.
In the FBI’s report, it records Hillary Clinton didn’t secure residences’ Sensitive Compartmented Information Facilities{SCIF}. Justin Cooper told the agents that the doors were not always closed. SCIF doors always have an automatic closer as shown below. The SCIF door locks automatically when it closes. Hence, Clinton had to use something to block the door from closing. Clinton did this for two reasons. Clinton could not be trained as to how to work the secure FAX machine within the SCIF. Clinton wanted to have the documents ready for her review when she arrived at her residences. To that end, Clinton tasked her maid, Marina Santos, and Justin Cooper, a Clinton Foundation employee, to collect the classified documents that were sent over the secure dedicated line. Neither Santos or Cooper had a security clearance.
These two videos will give an understanding on what is a SCIF.
The rules governing SCIFs and the documents that are stored within them.
It does not record in the FBI’s report that Santos was interviewed. Senator Feinstein had a Chinese spy at her side for nearly twenty years before the FBI made their discovery. What proof does the FBI have that Santos wasn’t copying the TOP SECRET documents within the SCIF and giving the purloined documents to a foreign power? According to the agent’s handwritten notes, Cooper could not confirm the SCIF’s safe was always closed when he entered the vacant SCIF to collect the classified documents.
The Inspector General’s report does not record these security breaches.
The Inspector General’s report falsely claims that Hillary Clinton did not send any classified information in emails to unauthorized persons. Clinton sent or caused to be sent classified information to the Clinton Foundation. The Inspector General is not at fault for this error in the report. We discovered through Lisa Page’s and Peter Strzok’s testimony that the Department of Justice had banned the FBI’s employees from reviewing any emails that were sent to the Clinton Foundation or any Clinton Foundation employee’s email accounts on the Hillary Clinton computer server{s}.
To make matters worse, James Clapper did not conduct the mandatory Directive 732 review according to Paul Sperry. Hence, we don’t know how much TOP SECRET SPECIAL ACCESS intelligence was compromised. This failure to act by Clapper isn’t recorded in the Inspector General’s report. Likewise, the Inspector General does not record in his report that Clapper did conduct the Directive 732 damage assessment.
Review these Inspector General’s report pages and the following video on this TOP SECRET information.