no it doesnt, especially when you only responded to half of my post.
1.)That defines what a record is. Ok. Thats great. That simply just a definition. Now what can be done with that definition? The answer to that question, which actually gives the act power is the powers it gives.
2.)The powers it gives is what you left out:
Under the original act:
"§ 2111. Material accepted for deposit
When the Archivist considers it to be in the public interest he may accept for deposit—
(1) the papers and other historical materials of a President or former President of the United States, or other official or former official of the Government, and other papers relating to and contemporary with a President or former President of the United States, subject to restrictions agreeable to the Archivist as to their use; and
(2) documents, including motion-picture films, still pictures, and sound recordings, from private sources that are appropriate for preservation by the Government as evidence of its organization, functions, policies, decisions, procedures, and transactions."
--This is what key right here is "(2)". No where does it state the archivist has the power to acuqisit if its "regardless of physical form or characteristics". Why does it not state that? Because no where in either of those sections does it use the world "records". Nowhere does it give the archivist any power to acquisit all public documents, be them done on a private source or a public source. It just give the archivist the power to acquist papers, docs, motion picture fils, photos, sound recordings from private source. Thats it.
Now we go to the revised amendment:
"§ 2111. Material accepted for deposit
(a) IN GENERAL.—When the Archivist considers it to be in the public interest the Archivist may accept for deposit—
(1) the papers and other historical materials of a President or former President of the United States, or other official or former official of the Government, and other papers relating to and contemporary with a President or former President of the United States, subject to restrictions agreeable to the Archivist as to their use; and
(2) recorded information (as such term is defined in section 3301(a)(2) of this title) from private sources that are appropriate for preservation by the Government as evidence of its organization, functions, policies, decisions, procedures, and transactions.
--The key here is in "(2)" of the amended section above. What does it say? Essentially the Archivist has the power to obtain all traditional forms of records, regardless of physical form or characteristics, including information created, manipulated, communicated, or stored in digital or electronic form.". Why does it say that? Because (2) uses the word "recorded information". And what does the definition section of the bill tell us: "(2) RECORDED INFORMATION DEFINED.—For purposes of paragraph (1), the term ‘recorded information’ includes all traditional forms of records, regardless of physical form or characteristics, including information created, manipulated, communicated, or stored in digital or electronic form." .
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CRPT-113srpt218/pdf/CRPT-113srpt218.pdf
No indication she did:
State: No Indication that Clinton Used E-mail for Classified Purposes - Bloomberg Politics
But I'm still interested in this Clinton amendment you said gave credence to your claims, especially when it came to emails. Can you point to this amendment Bill Clinton signed into law?