Comey’s claim to Congress about Clinton emails wasn’t true

FBI Director James Comey erroneously told Congress last week that former Hillary Clinton aide Huma Abedin forwarded “hundreds of thousands” of emails to her then-husband’s laptop — and the bureau is looking for a way to clean up the error.

The emails were forwarded to Anthony Weiner’s computer via a backup system for her phone, US officials told CNN last fall. Some, though far fewer than the “hundreds of thousands” Comey described, may have been sent in order to be printed, the officials say.

The emails weren’t marked as classified, though the FBI later found classified information contained in some emails recovered from Weiner’s laptop. The discovery of the emails last October prompted Comey to alert Congress, days before the presidential election, that the FBI had reopened its probe of Clinton’s private email server.

Some Democrats and Clinton herself have blamed her election loss at least partly on Comey’s decision to update Congress about the newly found emails. The FBI ended its investigation of the emails without changing its conclusion that no charges should be brought against Clinton or anyone else.

Pro-Publica first reported the FBI’s internal debate about whether to correct Comey’s testimony at a Senate hearing.

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