Freewill
Platinum Member
- Oct 26, 2011
- 31,158
- 5,073
Nothing will happen and the left will say that she did nothing wrong when exactly the opposite is true. I said yesterday her highness would get off and it appears that the FBI agrees. Too Big to fail. BS, BS, BS especially when they gave a whistle blower 3 1/2 years for the same thing. There is something fundamentally wrong with a country that condones lying. The queen has been crowned and now we must live with it.
As Benghazi inquiry fades, Clinton still faces legal questions about emails
They disagree about whether there’s enough evidence to prosecute her or her aides for sending and receiving government messages over the personal email system. routed through a private computer server in the basement of her New York home.
But most who spoke to McClatchy say it’s unlikely the former first lady, senator and Cabinet secretary will face charges because of her high profile and the hurdle to prove she knew the emails contained classified information when she sent them to others.
“She’s too big to jail,” said national security attorney Edward MacMahon Jr., who represented former CIA employee Jeffrey Sterling in 2011 in a leak case that led to an espionage prosecution and 3½-year prison term. He cited a pattern of light punishments for top government officials who have mishandled classified information while lower level whistleblowers such as Sterling have faced harsh prosecutions for revealing sensitive information to expose waste, fraud or abuse in government.
Read more here: As Benghazi inquiry fades, Clinton still faces legal questions about emails
As Benghazi inquiry fades, Clinton still faces legal questions about emails
They disagree about whether there’s enough evidence to prosecute her or her aides for sending and receiving government messages over the personal email system. routed through a private computer server in the basement of her New York home.
But most who spoke to McClatchy say it’s unlikely the former first lady, senator and Cabinet secretary will face charges because of her high profile and the hurdle to prove she knew the emails contained classified information when she sent them to others.
“She’s too big to jail,” said national security attorney Edward MacMahon Jr., who represented former CIA employee Jeffrey Sterling in 2011 in a leak case that led to an espionage prosecution and 3½-year prison term. He cited a pattern of light punishments for top government officials who have mishandled classified information while lower level whistleblowers such as Sterling have faced harsh prosecutions for revealing sensitive information to expose waste, fraud or abuse in government.
Read more here: As Benghazi inquiry fades, Clinton still faces legal questions about emails