Clinton sued by parents of men killed in Benghazi

Hillary Clinton is being sued by parents of two men killed in the Benghazi consulate attack, who blame Clinton's use of unsecured email servers for the deaths.
2 min read
10 August, 2016
Clinton last year testified in front of a Congressional committee on the deadly attack [Getty]
Parents of two American security agents killed in the 2012 attack on the US consulate in Libya's Benghazi are suing Hillary Clinton for the deaths.

The wrongful death suit blames Clinton's "reckless" handling of classified information on her private email server for the attack that resulted in the two men's deaths.

It alleges that terrorists were able to determine the men's whereabouts because of Clinton's use of an unsecured private server.

"It is highly probable, given defendant Clinton's history of reckless handling of classified information, that defendant Clinton, as secretary of state, sent and received information about ambassador Christopher Stevens and thus the US Department of State activities and covert operations that the deceased were a part of in Benghazi, Libya," said the text of the lawsuit filed in the US District Court in Washington, DC.

"As a direct result of defendant Clinton's reckless handling of this classified, sensitive information, Islamic terrorists were able to obtain the whereabouts of ambassador Christopher Stevens and thus the US State Department and covert and other government operations in Benghazi, Libya and subsequently orchestrate, plan, and execute the now infamous September 11, 2012 attack."

US authorities ended their probe into the matter, but Clinton's political enemies have been trying to keep controversy over her email server alive, including linking it to the attack in Benghazi nearly four years ago

Clinton had conducted official government business on a private server at her home, while serving as secretary of state, which critics say exposed official US correspondence to possible hacking attacks from foreign governments and terror operatives.

An FBI investigation last month concluded that the Democratic presidential nominee had been "extremely careless" with classified information on her server, but declined to recommend criminal charges against her over the scandal.

US authorities ended their probe into the matter, but Clinton's political enemies have been trying to keep controversy over her email server alive, including linking it to the attack in Benghazi nearly four years ago.

The assault on the US consulate, which occurred while Clinton was secretary of state, killed four Americans in all, including Washington's ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens.