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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: combjelly who wrote (843316)3/17/2015 5:44:12 PM
From: i-node  Read Replies (1) of 1573207
 
>> The thing is, a Secretary of State isn't an employee of the State Department, they were appointed to run it.

The law is specific on this: Appointees of the president are required to sign the form. Furthermore, what would be the point of such a form if you didn't require the person at the top to sign it? That makes no sense at all.

I have, many times, required an officer of a corporation to sign a representation letter before I signed an audit report. There is a reason for this: The guy at the top has to take responsibility. That's what you're doing.

In this case, Hillary was the guy at the top. If you're not getting her signature, there is absolutely no reason at all for the getting the signatures of her underlings.

This is the nature of representation letters. They don't make illegal acts legal; they serve to get it on record that a person of importance represents that particular events happened. So, if a legal situation comes up later, everyone knows exactly what the intent was.

Whether other secretaries did or did not do this is (a) unknown, since these people will lie through their teeth, and (b) irrelevant. They aren't running for the presidency.
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