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Mike Pence: 'No comparison' between his, Hillary Clinton's email practices

The Indianapolis Star
Vice President Mike Pence greets more than 200 employees at Blain's Fleet and Farm Distribution Center during a listening session March 3, 2017, with Wisconsin business leaders in Janesville, Wis. Pence also talked about The Indianapolis Star investigation into his private email account.

INDIANAPOLIS — Vice President Mike Pence made his first public comments Friday about his use of a private AOL email account to conduct some public business while he was Indiana's governor.

Republicans have criticized former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for discussing much higher level national security issues through a private email account.

Visiting Janesville, Wis., with other top Republicans to unite his party around a replacement of Obamacare, Pence toured the headquarters of Blain's Farm and Fleet, which offers everything from tools and animal feed to hunting gear and fishing licenses at 36 stores in Wisconsin, Illinois and Iowa.

"I'm very confident we are in full compliance with all of Indiana's laws," Pence said. "And in my service as vice president, I will continue that practice."

Pence press secretary Marc Lotter said Friday that the personal-account emails Pence sent as governor are being compiled to be released under Indiana's open records law.

► Related: Pence used personal email for state business — and was hacked
► Related: Here are some of Mike Pence's AOL emails

"There's no comparison whatsoever between Hillary Clinton's practice — having a private server, misusing classified information, destroying emails when they were requested by the Congress," Pence said. "We have fully complied with Indiana's laws.

"We had outside counsel review all of my previous email records to identify any that ever mentioned or referenced state business," he said.

Emails released to The Indianapolis Star in response to a public records request show that Pence communicated via his personal AOL account with top advisers on topics ranging from security gates at the governor’s residence to the state’s response to terror attacks across the globe.

► Related: Indiana took months to reveal Mike Pence emails
► Related: Photo captures Hillary Clinton reading about Pence's emails

Cyber-security experts say the emails raise concerns about whether such sensitive information was adequately protected from hackers, given that personal accounts like Pence's are typically less secure than government email accounts.

In fact, Pence's personal AOL account was hacked this past summer.

Contributing: Jason Stein and Jacob Carpenter, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Follow The Indianapolis Star on Twitter: @indystar