Xequecal wrote:
I don't see what they can possibly pin on Hillary over this. Simply having the emails is clearly not illegal, if it was there's no way she'd be escaping prosecution because she admits to this.
We don't know if she's escaping prosecution or not yet. The FBI likes to have its case completely wrapped up, ironclad, and are particularly wise to do so in this case both because of its high profile nature and Clinton's ability to afford the best lawyers - she'd have lawyers lining up begging to defend her just for the publicity.
Having classified materials stored in an unauthorized manner, however, is definitely illegal. I don't know where you get the idea that it's "clearly not"; that's laughably inaccurate, and if your contention is "She hasn't been prosecuted at this arbitrary point in time therefore her actions must have been legal" that's a particularly entertaining non sequiter.
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The felony she likely committed is destruction of federal records, she deleted and never turned over a portion of the emails and we only have her word that everything deleted was just personal correspondence. However, unless she was dumb enough to delete them in a way that leaves them recoverable, there's no evidence of what used to be there. Barring someone that received SI from her coming forward, (not likely, as they would themselves be admitting to a felony) how can they pin anything on her?
We don't have any access to the investigation information; its been going on for months, at least one person has been granted immunity and you're trying to reduce it to "well, she hasn't been prosecuted so far and only dumb people leave computer records in a recoverable state therefore there's no chance of a case against her."
I don't know much of anything about the ins and outs of computer forensics, but I am pretty sure that there are all sorts of ways to recover records that even pretty smart people think are unrecoverable. She may, indeed, be guilty of destroying records too, but she is hardly out of the woods on classified material either.
Either way, your inability to see how she can be prosecuted has everything to do with the fact that about 99% of the information on this matter has not been released to the public, and your complete and total unfamiliarity with the legal issues involved. There may or may not be a case against her, but not for any of the reasons you cite. I'm going to take a lesson from Coro here though, and not give any more free lessons on the legal system and criminal investigation. What you're doing would be the equivalent of telling Coro an electrical motor doesn't work the way he thinks it does because you can't get your garage door opener to work.
Statements like that are so absurd it's not worth the time to refute them, and you're doing the same thing here. In fact, I'm already regretting even typing this much.