July 26--REPORTING FROM WINTERSET, Iowa. -- Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton repeatedly insisted Saturday that she did not send or receive classified information through her personal email system.
"I am confident that I never sent nor received any information that was classified at the time it was sent and received," she told reporters after speaking at a local Democratic party fundraiser here.
Clinton added that the latest flare-up about her use of a personal email server was prompted by her desire for transparency and to have her emails available to the public.
Clinton was reacting to reports Friday that government investigators found that her use of a personal server during her time as secretary of State led to classified information being left vulnerable.
An inspector general review of a small portion of Clinton's emails found that four had information that should have been marked as classified. The Department of Justice is weighing whether to launch an investigation.
Clinton said she had "no idea" which four emails are in question, but that no information in her private email system was marked classified, and that it is in the State Department's unclassified system.
She said that the dispute over whether the information should have been marked classified has nothing to do with her, and that it was the result of bureaucratic wrangling over which of her emails should be publicly released. That dispute, she said, was prompted by her desire to make her emails available to the public, which resulted in a review of the emails to determine which should be released.
"This is all about my desire to have transparency and make the information public," Clinton said. "... If I had not said I wanted the public, I wanted the press, to see everything, this would not be an issue because the arguments that go on over what is or isn't to be released would not be applicable here."