Bowfinger
Lifer
- Nov 17, 2002
- 15,776
- 392
- 126
The brief snippets from your source are really ambiguous, but I don't think that's what they're saying. The IRS did search for Lerner's missing emails; they searched the PCs of 82 of her coworkers and recovered some 24,000 emails that were lost from Lerner's drive crash. What the IRS did NOT do was search backup tapes because, according to IRS policy at that time, email backups were kept only six months before being either reused or destroyed (presumably depending on the age of the tape cartridge). The IRS admitted several months ago they never searched backup tapes due to this retention policy.Interesting update.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...se-32-000-supposedly-lost-emails-turn-up.html
IRS inspector told congress yesterday that they are investigating potential criminal activity for Louis Lerner now that many (if not all) of the "missing" emails have been recovered.
So, the IRS sends reps to talk to congress and claim they tried so hard to retrieve all the emails but they were gone because of drive crashes. Now it turns out that they simply never asked for them to be retrieved? Wow, the lies continue.
What this story appears to refer to are those backup tapes. I've read two possible explanations. I don't know if either or both are correct. The first is that the IRS never actually destroyed the old tapes because of funding. (It's actually rather expensive to have tapes shredded through a secure, third-party service.) The second is that when tapes are reused, old data may not be fully overwritten if the more recent backup was shorter than the previous backup. It is thus sometimes possible to recover old data from the end of the tape. But again, I don't know for sure since there has been no official information released, to my knowledge.
Also, if you read your article closely, the Deputy TIGTA did NOT say they are investigating potential criminal activity for Lois Lerner. He was not that specific, and it appears the context was the failure to search these tapes. If so, that wouldn't be on Lerner, but would instead be on Koskinen or whoever failed to produce the information requested. Once again, however, we really need more context beyond the brief clips and quotes provided.
If the missing emails reveal wrongdoing by Lerner, it's possible there will be two criminal cases, one for the targeting and one for the coverup (or at least the failure to respond properly). It is also still possible there was no criminal activity. Time will tell.
