Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign maintained Wednesday that she did not send or received marked classified information on her personal email server, even as the FBI begins looking into the security of the server she used as secretary of state.
The federal law enforcement agency has contacted an IT company that helped maintain Clinton’s private server, as well as her personal lawyer, who has a copy of Clinton’s emails on a thumb drive, NBC News confirmed.
The FBI inquiry follows security referrals from two inspectors general alerting the Department of Justice that potentially classified information likely ended up on Clinton’s server, as The Washington Post first reported late Tuesday.
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The FBI is for the moment only investigating the security of the system, presumably to see if any sensitive information could have been compromised. The agency is not investigating Clinton herself, who is not accused of any wrongdoing.
In response the inquiry, Clinton’s campaign is repeating the assertion that she neither sent nor received known classified information, a claim Clinton herself first made after the her private email server was made public in March.
“She did not send nor receive any emails that were marked classified at the time,” Clinton spokesperson Nick Merrill said in a statement Wednesday. “We want to ensure that appropriate procedures are followed as these emails are reviewed while not unduly delaying the release of her emails. We want that to happen as quickly and as transparently as possible.”
It’s now apparent that Clinton likely did receive classified information, but the campaign and the State Department say it was not marked as such at the time. Critics of Clinton say she shouldn’t have had sensitive information on her server, regardless of whether it was marked as classified or not.
Clinton’s lawyer, David Kendall, meanwhile downplayed the FBI inquiry as routine.








