Revelation Of Last Year's "Tarmac"
Meeting Between Bill Clinton, Former AG Lynch Set Off "Mole Hunt" In FBI
The revelation last year of an
unorthodox tarmac meeting between former President Bill Clinton and
then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch set off a frenzied scramble at the
FBI to track down the source, newly released documents show.
Conservative watchdog group Judicial Watch, which on Thursday released
29 pages of FBI emails related to the 2016 meeting, said the messages
show officials were more concerned about the leak than the substance of
the report.
“These new FBI documents show the FBI was more concerned about a
whistleblower who told the truth about the infamous Clinton-Lynch tarmac
meeting than the scandalous meeting itself,” Judicial Watch President
Tom Fitton said in a statement.
The FBI initially claimed it had no documents pertaining to the meeting,
until uncovering the files later turned over to Judicial Watch.
The watchdog group, in releasing the files, said FBI officials sent a
flurry of emails after the meeting was reported in New York's Observer.
One email sent from an unidentified FBI account on July 3, 2016 said,
“We need to find that guy” and bring him or her before a supervisor.
Another said the source should be banned from working security details.
Officials speculated that the source of the leak was a Phoenix police
officer. One official said they contacted the Phoenix office and would
try to “stem any further damage.”
One official, in a July 2 email, said the article represented a "breach
in security protocol" and the Phoenix division would be pressured to
"identify the source of the breach."
Judicial Watch said all names on the emails were redacted and there is
no documentation showing concern over the meeting itself.
The tarmac meeting fueled Republican complaints at the time that Lynch
had improperly met with the husband of an investigation subject, just
before the probe into Hillary Clinton's personal email use was completed
with no charges filed.
Fired FBI Director James Comey, in Senate testimony, described the
tarmac meeting as problematic. The tarmac meeting came days before Comey
held a news conference informing the media that Hillary Clinton would
not be charged.
Comey in July 2016 said Clinton was “extremely careless” in handling
classified and other emails on the servers but recommend no criminal
charges -- a conclusion Lynch accepted.
Lynch later expressed regret that she sat down with Bill Clinton while
his wife was under federal criminal investigation, a chance encounter
she acknowledged “cast a shadow” on the public’s perception of a case
bound to influence the presidential campaign.
“I certainly wouldn’t do it again,” Lynch said of the meeting.