Rep. Trey Gowdy demands private email server info from White House

Presidential adviser Jared Kushner, standing next to wife Ivanka Trump, has been ordered by the House Oversight Committee to turn over details of private emails he used to conduct White House business. File Photo by Yuri Gripas/UPI

Sept. 26 (UPI) — The Republican chairman of the House Oversight Committee has joined calls for the White House to release information about anyone using private email servers for government work, including senior adviser Jared Kushner.

Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., joined an effort by Rep. Elijah Cummings, R-Md., to give the White House until Oct. 9 to identify anyone using anything other than official government email and cellphone accounts to conduct official business.

Cummings’ demand Monday came after it was disclosed that Kushner, President Donald Trump‘s adviser and son-in-law, used a private server to send official communications during the administration’s transitional period between November and January.

Later Monday, Gowdy signed onto a letter sent by he and Cummings to White House counsel.

“With numerous public revelations of senior executive branch employees deliberately trying to circumvent these laws by using personal, private, or alias email addresses to conduct official government business, the committee has aimed to use its oversight and investigative resources to prevent and deter misuse of private forms of written communication,” the letter stated.

Hillary Clinton, whose use of a private email server during her tenure as secretary of state became a an issue in her campaign against Trump, called the revelations “the height of hypocrisy” in an interview on SiriusXM Monday.

House Democratic investigators said they intend to investigate Kushner’s use of a private email server. Their actions could escalate probes involving Kushner’s Russia-related activities, which are under investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller.

Abbe Lowell, Kushner’s lawyer, has said fewer than 100 emails were sent with a private server.

Cummings sent a separate letter to Kushner, requesting that Kushner preserve all personal emails.

The New York Times on Monday cited current and former officials in a reportthat said at least five other White House employees similarly used a private server — and Newsweek reported that Ivanka Trump, now an unpaid federal employee, used a private server to send emails in late February.

Newsweek’s report cited documents obtained by non-profit American Oversight.

Use of private email in official government work is a violation of the Presidential Records Act, and has the potential to be compromised through cyberattacks and hacking. Clinton’s use of a private server was investigated by the FBI and Gowdy’s House Select Committee on Benghazi. She was not charged.

The White House told Newsweek that the emails involving Ivanka Trump were sent before she became a federal employee.

“She made clear that one of her reasons for [becoming a federal employee] was to ensure that she would have access to government-issued communications devices and receive an official email account to protect government records,” a White House representative said.

American Oversigh said Ivanka Trump had significant White House access before she officially signed on.

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