Attorney General CAUGHT In Committing MAJOR Crime

Attorney General CAUGHT In Committing MAJOR Crime

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Look what we have here! It seems New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has been caught with his pants down. Schneiderman has been caught using a private email address to conduct official business. Sound familiar?

It should as Schneiderman is big buddies with Hillary Clinton endorsing her during the 2016 Presidential election as well as serving on her leadership council in New York.
Court documents show Schneiderman involved in a year-long probe targeting ExxonMobil’s climate records used a private email address to conduct official business. Conservative legal group Energy and Environment Legal Institute (E&E Legal) offered insight and explained in motion to the court Friday that New York AG Eric Schneiderman submitted a privilege log of correspondence containing the email account. A savvy judge caught the discrepancy, recognizing that the private account was used after a review of the log.

The judge notes –

“The record reveals that the respondents [the NY AG’s office] took great pains to hide the true facts of the Attorney General’s use of private email addresses in an effort to stave off a court-ordered supplemental search.“

Interestingly enough, this is not Schneiderman’s first time being caught using private email accounts like this or attempting to cover it up, yet the NY Attorney General’s office had the audacity to claim in May that a search for personal email addresses was actually unnecessary due to the AG office’s policy of prohibiting the use of private emails for official business. The Attorney General’s office is, of course, denying the entire thing.

The discovery process revealed that Lem Srolovic, an assistant attorney general at Schneiderman’s office, used his own personal email account back in 2012 to send presentations to colleagues in the AG’s office to prepare for a meeting with “environmental organizations.” Srolovic’s email was what raised the alarm and started questions being asked about just how often the office uses personal emails for professional meetings. This use of personal email would be in direct violation of New York law if done while gathering information for the AG’s Exxon probe.

It is not currently clear if that particular presentation was used to build a case against companies like Exxon. However, there is significant evidence the campaign against the oil company began as early as 2012 at the La Jolla conference. E&E Legal has now filed motions with the court to demand the name on the private email account.