Spare_change
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- Jun 27, 2011
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A senior State Department official proposed a âquid pro quoâ to convince the FBI to strip the classification on an email from Hillary Clintonâs server â and repeatedly tried to âinfluenceâ the bureauâs decision when his offer was denied, even taking his plea up the chain of command, according to newly released FBI documents.
Fox News first reported Saturday that the FBI interview summaries and notes, known as 302s, contained allegations of a quid pro quo. Republican Rep. Jason Chaffetz, who initially told Fox News of the claim, called it a âflashing red light of potential criminality.â
Documents published Monday morning confirm the account. Notes from an interview with an unnamed FBI official reveal the State Department Undersecretary for Management Patrick Kennedy tried to horse-trade with the FBI, offering additional slots for the bureau overseas if they would de-classify a particular email marked âSECRET.â
According to the documents, an unnamed individual said he was âpressuredâ to âchange the classified email to unclassified.â
â[Redacted] indicated he had been contacted by PATRICK KENNEDY, Undersecretary of State, who had asked his assistance in altering the emailâs classification in exchange for a âquid pro quo,ââ the 302 states. â[Redacted] advised that in exchange for marking the email unclassified, STATE would reciprocate by allowing the FBI to place more Agents in countries where they are presently forbidden.â
At a subsequent meeting at the State Department regarding the classification review of Clintonâs materials where Kennedy presided, someone asked whether any of the emails in question were classified.
âMaking eye contact with [redacted] KENNEDY remarked, âWell, weâll see,ââ the document says. The official, according to one account, was âattempting to influence the FBI to change its markings.â
Kennedy allegedly asked at that point who else he could speak with and was referred to Michael Steinbach, then a top official with the FBIâs Counterterrorism Division. Kennedy âcontinued to pressure the FBI to change the classified markings on the email to unclassified,â the document says. âSTEINBACH refused to do so.â
Fox News first reported Saturday that the FBI interview summaries and notes, known as 302s, contained allegations of a quid pro quo. Republican Rep. Jason Chaffetz, who initially told Fox News of the claim, called it a âflashing red light of potential criminality.â
Documents published Monday morning confirm the account. Notes from an interview with an unnamed FBI official reveal the State Department Undersecretary for Management Patrick Kennedy tried to horse-trade with the FBI, offering additional slots for the bureau overseas if they would de-classify a particular email marked âSECRET.â
According to the documents, an unnamed individual said he was âpressuredâ to âchange the classified email to unclassified.â
â[Redacted] indicated he had been contacted by PATRICK KENNEDY, Undersecretary of State, who had asked his assistance in altering the emailâs classification in exchange for a âquid pro quo,ââ the 302 states. â[Redacted] advised that in exchange for marking the email unclassified, STATE would reciprocate by allowing the FBI to place more Agents in countries where they are presently forbidden.â
At a subsequent meeting at the State Department regarding the classification review of Clintonâs materials where Kennedy presided, someone asked whether any of the emails in question were classified.
âMaking eye contact with [redacted] KENNEDY remarked, âWell, weâll see,ââ the document says. The official, according to one account, was âattempting to influence the FBI to change its markings.â
Kennedy allegedly asked at that point who else he could speak with and was referred to Michael Steinbach, then a top official with the FBIâs Counterterrorism Division. Kennedy âcontinued to pressure the FBI to change the classified markings on the email to unclassified,â the document says. âSTEINBACH refused to do so.â