Platte River Networks' apartment building |
Clinton hired the "mom and pop op" back in 2013 when she thought it best to maintain Obama-like transparency and avoid scandals. Well how'd that work out fer ya Hill?
For Hillary Clinton. the US Secretary of State, to choose Platte River Networks to store her sensitive and confidential government email, is like Caitlyn Jenner choosing Chuck E. Cheese as her wedding site.
A former employee Tera Dadiotis of Platte River Networks told The Daily Mail that "At the time I worked for them they wouldn't have been equipped to work for Hillary Clinton because I don't think they had the resources, they were based out of a loft, so [it was] not very high security, we didn't even have an alarm." She worked for the company from 2007 - 2010.
"We were like your local IT company," Dadiotis said, "nothing special or fancy, we had a really good reputation but that was on a local level."
The only "little bit o' trouble" Platte River Networks has is that it was sued for stealing dozens of phone lines, some of which were used by the White House. Coincidence or Clintonence?
The company is said to have illegally accessed the master database for all US phone numbers and seized 390 lines that totally threw the government into a fisherman's bird's nest. Some of the phone numbers that suddenly stopped working were to White House military support desks, the DoD and the Department of Energy, according to the lawsuit. I suspect there will be more to follow on this.
The State Department has had Hillary's back for months on her claim that she didn't send or receive classified information on the toilet server, clearly going against government policy and common good sense.
The State Department is now stamping several dozen of the publicly released emails as "Classified" but stresses that it isn't evidence of rule-breaking, only abject stupidity, and that's should never disqualify a liberal from running for office.
Further details included in those "Classified" stamps, including dates, letters and numbers describing the nature of the classification, tend to throw a monkey wrench into the claims and the stuff is flying off the proverbial fan as I write this.
The stamps show that some of Benghazi-Hill's emails as Secretary of State have information that would deem them "born" classified from the time they were written. So far only 30 of the few scrutinized emails from 2009 include what the State Department's "Classified" stamps identify as so-called 'foreign government information,' which, due to the government definition that says any information, written or spoken, provided in confidence to U.S. officials by their foreign counterparts, are classified at the 'get-go.' In other words, they need to be presumed confidential at the very least.
The State Department disputes these claims but are still trying to come up with why these claims don't hold water.
Anyone who still thinks Hillary Clinton should be allowed to run for president, does not have the best interests of the nation at heart.
At least the FBI isn't acting like it's baffled by this bull-jack and are continuing to conduct their investigation.
One thing learned thus far is that Hillary sent at least 17 of the 30 email threads herself that have been reviewed by Reuters. At least one of those emails was to Sidney Blumenthal, a non-government person who is not eligible to receive the email.
In another email, the principal private secretary to David Miliband, the British foreign secretary at the time, indicates in the text that he is sending information about Afghanistan from Miliband in confidence. This was sent to Huma Abedin Weiner, Hillary's senior aide and a person with close ties to the Muslim Brotherhood and Muslim Students Association. He writes to Huma that Miliband "very much wants the Secretary (only) to see this note."
The note had about 5 fully redacted pages of information and Huma Abedin sent it to Clinton's private bathroom closet server.
I suspect that after Miliband thanked Hillary, China and Russia quietly thanked Platte River Networks.
Tweet
No comments:
Post a Comment