1. The server was already there when she became secretary of state. It had been set up for her husband.
2. She turned over all government-related emails in compliance with an earlier request from the State Department.
3. She never emailed any classified material.
4. She neither kept nor turned over personal emails.
5. Her choices at the beginning of her State Department tenure were: carry two devices and use two separate email accounts or carry one device and use one account. She chose the latter for the sake of convenience and said looking back maybe she should have chosen the former.
Here is AP's report on the session - many will abound, obviously - I think one is sufficient.
As for the media and right wing going bonkers over the security issues and wondering whether this server was hacked, exactly how likely is that? The State Department email system has been hacked since November and they still do not know who is doing it. Hillary's server, on the other hand, is purported to have been unknown to all including the White House until the New York Times ran their story. So ... was it hacked? No one even knew it was there! Lost in the scuffle: the probability that, until that New York Times article, the Clintons, arguably, had one of the most secure servers in the country - in and outside of government.
UNITED NATIONS — Breaking her silence, Hillary Rodham Clinton conceded Tuesday that she should have used a government email as secretary of state, but insisted she was not violating any rules or seeking to hide her communications.
"I fully complied by everyknow who is doing it. rule I was governed by," Clinton said in her first public comments since it was disclosed last week that she exclusively used a private email and server for government business.
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Here are a few photos from the U.N. conference.