Following up on Bill's post, it really is too bad that C&C doesn't have its own server, because I would very much like to use one of these. We don't do ads on this blog, but I will tell you where to get this one.
The statute Bill referred to is the one involved in the Supreme Court's "fish overboard" case of last term, Yates v. United States. See this post.
Yates limited the reach of the statute regarding "tangible objects" to those which "record or preserve information," not including fish, but that won't help Mrs. Clinton. Emails and the servers that hold them are squarely within the statute as interpreted by Yates.
Playing dumb about what it means to wipe a server is about as convincing as the immigrant who speaks fluent English until the questioning gets tough and then suddenly can't understand a word.
The statute Bill referred to is the one involved in the Supreme Court's "fish overboard" case of last term, Yates v. United States. See this post.
Yates limited the reach of the statute regarding "tangible objects" to those which "record or preserve information," not including fish, but that won't help Mrs. Clinton. Emails and the servers that hold them are squarely within the statute as interpreted by Yates.
Playing dumb about what it means to wipe a server is about as convincing as the immigrant who speaks fluent English until the questioning gets tough and then suddenly can't understand a word.

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