Lachlan Markay is a staff writer for the Washington Free Beacon. He comes to the Beacon from the Heritage Foundation, where he was the conservative think tank's first investigative reporter. He graduated from Hamilton College in 2009, and currently lives in Washington, D.C. His Twitter handle is @lachlan. His email address is markay@freebeacon.com.
Wall Street Donations to Clinton Totaled Seven Figures Before 9/11
FEC data contradicts Dem presidential frontrunner’s claim that Wall Street supports her because of terrorism
Lawsuit: Regulators Revealed Donor Names of Thousands of Nonprofits
The California attorney general’s office posted donor names online despite privacy assurances
GOP Debate Highlights Conservatives’ Philosophical Divisions
Candidates spar over Republican Party’s ideological underpinnings
Christie Trains Sights on Clinton During ‘Undercard’ Debate
Relegated to earlier event, New Jersey governor declines to go after GOP rivals
Agreement Undermines Key Clinton Defense of Personal Email Use
Document signed upon taking office prohibits misuse of ‘marked or unmarked classified information’
Emails: Clinton’s BlackBerry Was Vulnerable to Hackers
State officials had intelligence regarding Clinton BlackBerry’s ‘vulnerability’ during first visit abroad
Hillary Warned in 2011 of Repeated Attempts to Breach State Officials’ Personal Email Accounts
Memo to Clinton from State’s top diplomatic security official warned of malicious ‘phishing’ attacks
Clinton Signed NDA Laying Out
Criminal Penalties for Mishandling of Classified Info
Dem presidential candidate and top aides signed NDAs warning against ‘negligent handling’ of classified information
House Rejects Measure to Bar Ex-Im Financing for Terrorism Sponsors
Foreign Affairs chairman worries that U.S. will back Iranian airline sector used to support international terrorist proxies
Nonprofit Asks Supreme Court to Protect Donors from California Regulator
The Center for Competitive Politics is petitioning the court to hear what could be a landmark donor disclosure case