As I predicted.
Thus demonstrating yet again your ignorance of this story as well as your consistent failure to read posts before you rush to jerk your [ knee ] in sputtering self-gratification. The senior IRS tech did, in fact, "crack the case" to install a new head stack. This has not only been well documented in this thread, I pointed it out again in the very post to which you responded.
And no, the tech did not "recommend" sending the drive out. That's just more of the propaganda fed to the rubes. He simply noted it would be the only other measure to try, if Lerner wanted to pursue it.
No matter how wildly you try to shift the goal posts, the fact remains that Lerner made a substantial effort to have her drive recovered, even sending it to an IRS forensics technician with specialized recovery equipment. This is not the action of someone trying to destroy evidence. Your loopy conspiracy theories are a Hail Mary smear by the party faithful, dead-enders who need a scandal, any scandal, to keep them properly enraged.
Congratulations. You've finally caught up to where I was two months ago, as I repeatedly explained this to the other dead-enders. And no, as usual, I'm not pretending anything of the sort. I was responding directly to a comment with the data we have. Far from a "plethora" of drive failures, there are now reported to be only 6 (out of at least 83) that resulted in at least some loss of email. That's a fact, no matter what your knee thinks.