Trump advisor reportedly used personal Gmail for ‘sensitive’ military discussions

Last week, National Security Advisor Michael Waltz inadvertently invited a journalist to a Signal chat discussing a planned military strike. Today, a new Washington Post report says that he has also discussed sensitive military positions and powerful weapons systems relating to an ongoing conflict," using his personal Gmail account.
Waltz, along with other members of the National Security Council, used Gmail for highly technical conversations with colleagues at other government agencies," according to emails the Post saw, with headers showing that others on the emails used their government-issued accounts. Waltz also had less sensitive, but potentially exploitable information sent to his Gmail," like his schedule and other work documents," some unnamed government officials told the outlet. The Post quotes National Security Council spokesman Brian Hughes saying, Waltz didn't and wouldn't send classified information on an open account," and that Hughes says he's seen no evidence of Waltz using his personal email as described."
The Post's report puts the adviser's communications practices back in the spotlight after Waltz invited The Atlantic editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, to a Signal chat about a military strike in Yemen that took place later that day. Attorney General Pam Bondi indicated that the incident probably won't be criminally investigated in response to questions at a press conference Sunday night, while suggesting that people should be discussing what was in Hillary Clinton's home," seemingly referring to the personal email server scandal that cropped up late in her last Presidential campaign.
Since then, a Wired report detailed how his public Venmo account had revealed the names of hundreds" of his associates, including journalists and military officers. And like most of us, personal online account info for Waltz and other Trump administration officials has been found in online database leaks, including several passwords for Waltz's email address," writes Spiegel International.