Pretty sure all the real evidence has been destroyed. That server they're finally turning over has been wiped and the thumb drive has probably been selectively cleaned as well. Nothing will happen to her but I damn well hope our candidates, especially the one who wins the nomination, makes sure this is well publicized through campaign ads and such. The left can't even accuse us of politicizing a tragedy with this one.
And after we win the WH, put this corrupt bitch on trial and throw her ass in jail. Hell, I hope whoever wins investigates the whole corrupt administration. Won't happen but I'd at least like to see her prosecuted.
Cindie
There is a fact about thumb drives, SD cards etc. that most people overlook when it comes to wiping them. - They do not behave like hard disks. The life expectancy of a thumb drive is quite a bit shorter than the average disk, so the drives always write sequentially, and they will not begin an overwrite operation until the sequence makes it to the end, and repeats.
To explain :
Say I have a thumb drive, that comes with a storage capacity of 100 cells, and I save three files on it. The first file is six cells big, the second four, and the third eight. The thumb drive will write the first file from cells 1 through 6, the second file occupies cells 7 through 10 - the last 11 though 18.
I then delete the second file marking cells 7 through 10 available, and then save a new fourth file, which is also 4 cells big.
Where does the drive put the new file ?
The answer is cells 19 through 22. And that behavior will continue until something writes to cell 100 --THEN-- the drive will recycle space freed up by deleted files, starting from the lowest available cell upward. Thumb drives and other SDCard type media do that to prolong the life of the device - because the drive can only write to the same cells so many times before those cells are destroyed. Thumb drives do not handle error correction well, so once a few cells go bad, the drive is toast.
Now Lets say the Hildebeast has a great, big 64GB thumb drive. The odds are good that she hasn't ever reached the last cell on that thumb drive, meaning that
*everything* marked deleted is still there. Also, if she had someone attempt to mess with the drive to wipe it, it will be painfully obvious to even an I.T. intern.