Bryan Pagliano, Clintons Former Tech Staffer, Will Plead The Fifth In Email Investigation
by Emily Atkin
Think Progress
Sep 2, 2015 10:18pm
A former State Department staffer who worked on Hillary Clintons email server is planning to invoke his Fifth Amendment right to avoid testifying before Congress about it, according to a memo obtained by ThinkProgress.
Bryan Pagliano, who also worked as the IT director on Clintons 2008 presidential campaign, will not testify in order to avoid unsubstantiated attacks from Republicans, who have been frequently accusing Clinton of criminality for using a personal email server while serving as Secretary of State.
Considering there has so far been no evidence of criminal conduct, the memo asserted, it made sense for Pagliano to avoid risking erroneous coverage of his testimony.
It is understandable that attorneys for Mr. Pagliano have advised him to assert his constitutional right not to testify given the onslaught of reckless accusations of criminal conduct that continue to be made by many Republicans including several running for President without evidence to support their claims, read the letter, sent on Wednesday to the House committee investigating the 2012 Benghazi attack. The memo, sent from the House Benghazi Committee Democrats, cited a letter received on Monday from Paglianos attorneys.
According to the Washington Post, that letter also cited the current FBI investigation into Clintons email as a reason for Pagliano to plead the Fifth. The FBI is investigating Clintons use of a personal email server while serving as Secretary of State, specifically whether the use of that server jeopardized national security information.
The FBI investigation is not criminal and does not accuse Clinton of wrongdoing. No accusations of criminality have been made from the Justice Department, State Department, or FBI.
Despite this, the political environment has indeed been fraught with questionable attacks. The memo itself pointed to several reckless accusations by Republican candidates for president, including Donald Trump (The fact is, what shes done is criminal), Mike Huckabee (This is about her violation of the law), and Scott Walker (A complete and thorough criminal investigation is the only way to get to the bottom of this serious matter).
Accusations of criminality have not been limited to Republicans. Last month, the New York Times reported that Clinton may be the subject of a criminal investigation by the Department of Justice because of her personal email account, but later had to walk that back. A Times editor said the error was due to sloppiness on deadline.