Did Hillary Clinton actually hand classified material to her maid Marina Santos? Yes, according to emails obtained by the New York Post.

As secretary of state, Hillary Clinton routinely asked her maid to print out sensitive government e-mails and documents — including ones containing classified information — from her house in Washington, DC, e-mails and FBI memos show. But the housekeeper lacked the security clearance to handle such material. In fact, Marina Santos was called on so frequently to receive e-mails that she may hold the secrets to E-mailgate — if only the FBI and Congress would subpoena her and the equipment she used.

Here are just a few emails between Clinton and her State Department staff that suggest how careless the secretary of state was with the intel. Keep in mind again that Santos had no security clearance to give her permission to be anywhere near classified information.

In a classified 2012 e-mail dealing with the new president of Malawi, another Clinton aide, Monica Hanley, advised Clinton, “We can ask Marina to print this.” “Revisions to the Iran points” was the subject line of a classified April 2012 e-mail to Clinton from Hanley. In it, the text reads, “Marina is trying to print for you.”

If Santos is interviewed by the FBI and it turns out to be true, we have yet more proof that former Secretary of State Clinton was not interested in the well-being of our national security. Of course, she can continue to argue she simply does not remember any briefings that detailed how to handle classified information and that she did not know the "C" on some messages she received meant classified.

Clinton has been panicking ever since the FBI announced it was reopening its investigation into her emails after finding thousands more on Anthony Weiner's laptop, the estranged husband of Clinton aide Huma Abedin. While she was cruising her way to Election Day, Clinton has turned rather negative, yelling about Donald Trump's lewd rhetoric at her campaign rallies - and is losing her voice as a result.