FBI looking into the security of Hillary Clinton’s private email setup

1Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks to supporters during a campaign rally at La Rumba, a Denver dance club and restaurant, Tuesday, Aug. 4, 2015.
2Clinton has said the private e-mail server she used as secretary of state "had numerous safeguards."
3The FBI has begun an examination of the security of Hillary Rodham Clinton's private email setup, contacting in the past week a Denver-based technology firm that helped manage the unusual system, according to two government officials.
4Also last week, the FBI contacted Clinton's lawyer, David Kendall, with questions about the security of a thumb drive in his possession that contains copies of work emails Clinton sent during her time as secretary of state.
5The FBI's interest in Clinton's email system comes after the intelligence community's inspector general referred the issue to the Justice Department in July.
6Intelligence officials expressed concern that some sensitive information was not in the government's possession and could be "compromised."
7The referral did not accuse Clinton of any wrongdoing, and the two officials said Tuesday that the FBI was not targeting her.
8Kendall confirmed the contact, saying: "The government is seeking assurance about the storage of those materials. We are actively cooperating."
9A lawyer for the Denver company, Platte River Networks, declined to comment, as did multiple Justice Department officials.
10The inquiries are bringing to light new information about Clinton's use of the system and the lengths she went to install a private channel of communication outside government control - a setup that has emerged as a major issue in her presidential campaign.
11For instance, the server installed in her Chappaqua, New York, home as she was preparing to take office as secretary of state was originally used by her first campaign for the presidency, in 2008, according to two people briefed on the setup.
12A staffer who was on the payroll of her political action committee set it up in her home, replacing a server that Clinton's husband, former president Bill Clinton, had been using in the house.
13The inquiries by the FBI follow concerns from government officials that potentially hundreds of emails that passed through Clinton's private server contained classified or sensitive information.
14At this point, the probe is preliminary and is focused on ensuring the proper handling of classified material.
15Nick Merrill, a spokesman for Clinton's campaign, declined to comment on the FBI's actions.
16He noted that Clinton has called repeatedly for the State Department to release her emails to the public, a process that is ongoing.
17In a statement, Merrill said that Clinton "did not send nor receive any emails that were marked classified at the time. 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."
18The controversy over Clinton's email dates to the summer of 2014, when, according to government officials, State Department lawyers realized they didn't have access to some of her records as they prepared responses to congressional requests related to the 2012 attacks on a U.S. compound in Benghazi, Libya.
19In October 2014, the State Department asked four former secretaries to turn over emails in their private possession.
20In December, Clinton handed over 55,000 pages of emails, which she said represented all of her work-related correspondence.
21She has said she deleted all other emails she had sent or received as secretary of state, indicating that they dealt only with personal matters.
22In March, The New York Times reported that Clinton exclusively used a private email system.
23Clinton has said she handled her email this way for the convenience of carrying just one phone.
24Critics say Clinton's private server arrangement put her discussions with some aides outside the reach of government investigators, congressional committees and courts seeking public records from the State Department.
25The Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, wrote a letter to FBI Director James B. Comey on July 24 asking him what steps his office had taken to ensure that classified information held on Kendall's thumb drive, and once kept on Clinton's server, was being properly secured.
26A State Department official said that once the agency identified classified material in the emails in May, it instructed Clinton's lawyers on "appropriate measures for physically securing" the emails.
27Responsibility for setting up and maintaining the server that handled personal email communications for Bill and Hillary Clinton passed through a number of different hands, starting with Clinton staffers with limited training in computer security and eventually expanding to Platte River.
28In 2008, responsibility for the system was held by Justin Cooper, a longtime aide to the former president who served as a personal assistant and helped research at least two of his books.
29Cooper had no security clearance and no particular expertise in safeguarding computers, according to three people briefed on the server setup.
30Cooper declined to comment.
31"The system we used was set up for President Clinton's office. And it had numerous safeguards. It was on property guarded by the Secret Service. And there were no security breaches," Hillary Clinton said in March.
32Those briefed on the server setup say the device installed for Bill Clinton was deemed too small for the addition of a sitting Cabinet official.
33Instead, a server that had been purchased for use by Hillary Clinton's 2008 campaign was installed at the Chappaqua home.
34With the new server came an additional specialist: Bryan Pagliano, who had served as her campaign's IT director.
35According to federal campaign finance records, Pagliano was paid by Clinton's Senate leadership PAC through April 2009.
36The next month, he went to work for the State Department as an IT specialist, a department official said.
37The people briefed on the server indicated that he continued to act as the lead specialist responsible for it.
38The email system was not always reliable, these people said, with Pagliano summoned at various times to fix problems.
39Notably, the system crashed for days after New York was hit by Hurricane Sandy in October 2012, while Hillary Clinton was secretary of state.
40That led to new conversations about the need for better security, durability and a more professional setup, according to these people.
41In 2013, the Clintons hired Platte River to maintain the data.
42Merrill, the Clinton spokesman, declined to respond to detailed questions about the setup of the server.