Pence used his private Email for Indiana
state business, and was hacked
Records
obtained by the Indianapolis Star show
that Vice President Mike Pence was using a private email address
to conduct state business at the same time that he joined the chorus of Republicans condemning Democratic presidential
candidate Hillary Clinton for operating similarly by using a private
email address and server.
The
revelation came late Thursday when the Indiana attorney general's office
released 29 emails from the AOL account that Pence used as governor, in
response to multiple public records requests from the Indianapolis Star.
"Pence
fiercely criticized Clinton throughout the 2016 presidential campaign, accusing
her of trying to keep her emails out of public reach and exposing classified
information to potential hackers," as the Star noted.
The
Indiana attorney general's office declined to release more emails "because
the state considers them confidential and too sensitive to release to
the public," the newspaper reported.
If
the emails are too sensitive to be seen by the public, it is unclear why Pence
considered an AOL server an appropriate place to host them.
"The
fact that these emails are stored in a private AOL account is crazy to
me," Justin Cappos, a computer security professor at New York University's
Tandon School of Engineering, commented to the Star. "This account was used to handle these messages that are
so sensitive they can't be turned over in a records request."
And
at least one unintended person has seen those sensitive emails: an anonymous
hacker.
Pence's AOL account was hacked in June, after Pence apparently responded to a phishing attempt.
"Pence's contacts were sent an email falsely claiming that the governor and his wife were stranded in the Philippines and needed money," reports the Associated Press.
The Indianapolis Star delved into why
this particular hack is so alarming:
Because
the hacker appears to have gained access to Pence's contacts, experts say it is
likely that the account was actually penetrated, giving the hacker access
to Pence's inbox and sent messages.
The
nature of that hack suggests it was part of a broad, impersonal attack—not one
carefully crafted to target Pence in particular, Cappos said.
"It's
particularly concerning that someone who didn't do a very particular, very
specific attack was able to hack this account," he said.
AOL
has been the target of hackers before: users' emails and passwords were stolen
in a massive breach back in 2014.
Yet
Pence continued to use his own private AOL address to conduct state business,
all while heaping criticism on Clinton for keeping her emails "out of the
public reach":
"Hillary
Clinton [...] operated in such a way to keep her e-mails, and particularly her
interactions, while Secretary of State, with the Clinton Foundation out of the
public reach, out of public accountability," Pence told Meet
the Press in October.
Pence
allies are refusing, however, to acknowledge the similarity between Clinton's
and Pence's behavior. "The comparison is absurd," Pence spokesman
Marc Lotter told AP.
"Officials
are eager to point the finger at a lack of transparency when it happens on the
other side," Gerry Lanosga, former president of the Indiana Coalition for
Open Government, told the Indianapolis
Star. "But they dodge those issues when it comes to their own
side."