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Clinton IT staffer intends to take the Fifth in upcoming deposition

A former State Department IT specialist who was involved in setting up and maintaining Hillary Clinton’s private email server plans to invoke the Fifth Am...
Hillary Clinton

A former State Department IT specialist who was involved in setting up and maintaining Hillary Clinton’s private email server plans to invoke the Fifth Amendment at a deposition next week, refusing to answer “any and all questions that may be put to him.”

The move comes even after the staffer, Bryan Pagliano, accepted an immunity deal with the FBI earlier this year and began cooperating with their investigation into the server.

Pagliano was then subpoenaed by the conservative legal watchdog group Judicial Watch to testify as part of an ongoing Freedom of Information Act lawsuit they filed against the State Department. He is one of at least seven witnesses the group is interviewing over the coming weeks in that case.

In a court filing submitted Wednesday in that case, Pagliano’s attorneys said their client is now “caught up in a lawsuit with an undisputed political agenda,” and asked that the deposition, scheduled to take place on Monday, not be recorded.

“Asserting the Fifth Amendment in a civil procedure like this has its implications,” Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton told CNN in response to the filing. “We’re going to have to grapple with as best we can.”

But the group is objecting to Pagliano’s request not to be filmed, citing a decision by Judge Emmet Sullivan last week that ensured video from the depositions can’t be released to the public.

“Judge Sullivan already put a mechanism in place that addresses these concerns,” said Fitton, adding that the video would be “helpful to Judge Sullivan in assessing the witness’ demeanor.”

Acknowledging Sullivan’s order, Pagliano’s lawyers said his particular deposition “presents not only privacy considerations, but unique constitutionally protected interests that require relief distinct from the (order).”

A State Department official declined to comment on the case, citing a policy not to address matters under litigation.

Pagliano, who was hired by the State Department after a stint as IT director for Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign, was paid separately by the Clintons to perform work on the server, located at their home in Chappaqua, New York.

He also pled the Fifth last year to avoid answering questions from the House Select Committee on Benghazi — a congressional panel set up to investigate a 2012 attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

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