Bryan Pagliano provided investigators with technical information and physical evidence, a source said.
(AP Photo/Cliff Owen)


Clinton IT assistant providing new evidence to FBI


By Rudy Takala(@RudyTakala) • 3/11/16 12:53 PM

The former tech assistant who helped to set up a private server in Hillary Clinton's home has provided the FBI with a
range of new details, according to a Friday report.

"Bryan Pagliano is a devastating witness and, as the webmaster, knows exactly who had access to [Clinton's] computer
and devices at specific times. His importance to this case cannot be over-emphasized," a source close to the investigation
told Fox News.

The source said Pagliano had provided investigators with technical information and physical evidence, including photographs
of her on the road, that would help them to discover when and how Clinton sent emails that held classified information.

"Don't forget all those photos with her using various devices and it is easy to track the whereabouts of her phone," the
source said. "It is still boils down to a paper case. Did you email at this time from your home or elsewhere using this device?
And here is a picture of you and your aides holding the devices."

Information held by Pagliano had long been sought by law enforcement officials and congressional investigators. However,
he invoked his right against self-incrimination before reaching an immunity agreement with the Justice Department earlier
this month.

According to the source, the FBI is honing in on 22 emails on Clinton's server that were deemed "top secret," particularly
any that she wrote herself. "Mrs. Clinton sending them in this instance would show her intent much more than would
receiving [them]," the source said. "Hillary Clinton was at a minimum grossly negligent in her handling of
[National Defense Information] materials merely by her insisting that she utilize a private server versus a [U.S. government]
server."

The source added that morale at the agency was high. "Nobody is moping around, which is the first sign a big case is
going south."



Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Senate Homeland Security Committee Chairman Ron Johnson,
R-Wis., also have sought Pagliano for renewed questioning in light of the immunity deal, stating in a letter last week that he could
no longer cite self-incrimination to avoid answering questions.

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/article/2585581