The Washington Post has a massive story out today diving into Hillary Clinton's private e-mail scandal—that's the Post's word—including this revelation regarding the FBI investigation into whether crimes were committed and whether her server was hacked:
One hundred forty-seven FBI agents have been deployed to run down leads, according to a lawmaker briefed by FBI Director James B. Comey. The FBI has accelerated the investigation because officials want to avoid the possibility of announcing any action too close to the election.
Here's more of the story, in numbers:
2,093: How many e-mail chains on Clinton's private e-mail server, run out of the basement of her home, contained classified information.
22: How many e-mails are considered "so highly classified" that they cannot be publicly released.
Zero: How much classified material Clinton claimed was on the server in a March 10, 2015 news conference.
Two months: How long Clinton's private e-mail server lacked a basic level of encryption, after she took office as Secretary of State.
Zero: How much evidence the Clinton camp says exists of a security breach of the server.
Three: How many supervisors of Bryan Pagliano, a State Department IT employee, had no idea he was "moonlighting" to maintain Clinton's private e-mail server at the same time.
11,000: About how many domestic employees of the State Department received a 2011 memo from Clinton urging them to not to conduct government business from a personal e-mail account for security's sake, while Clinton kept using her unsecured BlackBerry and private e-mail account for government business.