there s not been a defirm nation as to who posted the comment. the review is in the hands of the senate sergeant at arms. we tried to get ahold of the senate sergeant at arms to fill us in on what they re looking at and how long these things generally take. we got no comment on that, even though on broad questions about other completed investigations. the question tonight is why didn t the chief of staff handle this in house? they know all the people, they know who had access to the computer, they know who was in the office or was on vacation when the message was sent. and why four days later has no culprit been identified? joining me now, jared polis, in addition to being from colorado he s also highly tech savvy. in college he co-founded an internet access provider and went on to launch two commerce operations. also joining us, r. clark hooper, a group that focuses on reaching out to conservatives about issues affecting gay and lesbian americans. if this happened in your office and y
we got no comment on that, even though on broad questions about other completed investigations. the question don t is why didn t the chief of staff handle this in house? they know all the people, they know who had access to the computer, they know who was in the office or was on vacation when the message was sent. and why four days later has no culprit been identified? joining me now, jared polis, in college he co-founded an internet access provider and went on to launch two commerce operations. also joining us, r. clark hooper, a group that focuses on reaching out to conservatives about issues affecting gay and lesbian americans. if this happened in your office and you knew the exact time the comment was created and from which computer, how difficult would it be to ferret who is responsible? extremely easy. there s seven people in the office. seven suspects. secondly we know which computer.
us in on what they re looking at and how long these things generally take. we got no comment on that, even though on broad questions about other completed investigations. so the question tonight is why didn t the senator s chief of staff simply handle this in-house? they know all the people, they know who had access to the particular computer, they know who was in the office or was on vacation when the message was sent. and why nearly four days after the posting has no culprit been identified? joining me now, jared polis, in college he co-founded an internet access provider and went on to launch two commerce operations. also joining us, r. clark hooper, a group that focuses on reaching out to conservatives about issues affecting gay and lesbian americans. so representative, if this happened in your office and you knew the sack time the comment was created and from which computer, how difficult would it be to ferret who is responsible? it s extremely easy. first of all according to th
invasion horror. family held hostage and assaulted and killed, all the while the alleged murderers were texting each other, talking about champing at the bit to do the crime. tonight you ll see their texts and hear what happened in court today. we begin keeping them honest as we always do with an internet slur and death threat sent from the office of a u.s. senator. our question tonight, why is it taking so long to figure out who sent it? the senator is saxby chambliss, republican of georgia. his staff admits the threat came from someone in his office. his office condemns it and promises to hold the guilty party accountable. but it s been nearly four days since the threatening blog was made. four days, and it took just a few hours to trace it to a computer at the senator s atlanta area office. only a limited number of people have access to that office and its computers, yet so far the senator and his staff remain silent on who was there and who the culprit likely was. he tu
horror. family held hostage and assaulted and killed, all the while the alleged murderers were texting each other, talking about champing at the bit to do the crime. tonight you ll see their texts. we begin keeping them honest as we always do with an internet slur and death threat sent from the office of a u.s. senator. our question tonight, why is it taking so long to figure out who sent it? the senator is saxby chambliss, republican of georgia. the staff admits the threat came from someone in his office. his office condemn it s and promises to hold the guilty party accountable. but it s been nearly four days. four days, it took just a few hours to trace it to a computer at the senator s atlanta area office. only a limited number of people have access to that office and its computers, yet so far the senator and his staff remain silent on who was there and who the culprit likely was. in turn, the investigate over to others and refusing to make any more comments. the posts w