Hillary Clinton and her staff removed "lamps and furniture" from State Department offices and brought them to her home in the early months of her tenure, the FBI said in 100 pages of notes made public Monday.

Witnesses did not know if she ever brought the items back.

However, the State Department denied the occurrence on Tuesday, specifying in a statement that Clinton had brought a "small number of personal items" to her offices at the outset of her tenure and simply "took those personal items with her when she departed."

The alleged move was just one of many that irritated members of her security detail, who described her treatment of security agents as "contemptuous."

"Prior to Clinton's tenure, being an agent on the Secretary of State's protective detail was seen as an honor and a privilige reserved for senior agents," the FBI wrote in its notes. "However, by the end of Clinton's tenure it was staffed largely with new agents because it was difficult to find senior agents willing to work for her."

Clinton's frequent breaches of security protocol, including bringing her unsecured Blackberry phone into a secure area where classified information is handled, made many diplomatic security agents "indignant."

Many agents sought transfers off her detail or simply found different jobs altogether, the FBI noted.

The Clintons were accused of absconding from the White House with furniture and gifts that should have remained in government custody.

What's more, former Secret Service agents have long indicated Clinton treats her guards poorly.