Ivanka
Trump sent hundreds of emails last year to White House aides, Cabinet
officials and her assistants using a personal account, many of them in
violation of federal records rules, according to people familiar with a
White House examination of her correspondence.
White
House ethics officials learned of Trump’s repeated use of personal
email when reviewing emails gathered last fall by five Cabinet agencies
to respond to a public records lawsuit. That review revealed that
throughout much of 2017, she often discussed or relayed official White
House business using a private email account with a domain that she
shares with her husband, Jared Kushner.
The
discovery alarmed some advisers to resident Trump, who feared that his
daughter’s practices bore similarities to the personal email use of
Hillary Clinton, an issue he made a focus of his 2016 campaign. He
attacked his Democratic challenger as untrustworthy and dubbed her
“Crooked Hillary” for using a personal email account as secretary of
state.
Some
aides were startled by the volume of Ivanka Trump’s personal emails —
and taken aback by her response when questioned about the practice. She
said she was not familiar with some details of the rules, according to
people with knowledge of her reaction.
The White House referred requests for comment to Ivanka Trump’s attorney and ethics counsel, Abbe Lowell.
In
a statement, Peter Mirijanian, a spokesman for Lowell, acknowledged
that the resident’s daughter occasionally used her private email before
she was briefed on the rules, but he said none of her messages
contained classified information.
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