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State Department to release more Clinton emails but falls short of goal
The State Department has been releasing Clinton’s emails monthly since June to comply with a judge’s order that they be made public by the end of January 2016.
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The U.S. State Department released almost 5,500 pages of former Secretary Hillary Clinton’s private email at 4 p.m., the second to last installment of the court-mandated rollout. Contreras’ schedule required State to release 16 percent of Clinton’s emails – or 8,800 pages’ worth – this month, putting the agency six percent shy of its court-ordered goal. “To narrow that gap, the State Department will make another production of former Secretary Clinton’s email sometime next week”. However, federal investigators, looking into the latest batch of Clinton’s emails released by the State Department, have determined that at least some of the emails contain classified information. The emails will still be searchable by keyword, as have all other releases.
The mounting number of correspondence with classified material has been a lingering problem for Clinton on the presidential campaign, spotlighting her decision to exclusively use a private email account, routed through a personal server installed at her suburban NY home, for work related correspondence while secretary. She also claims that she never sent or received emails marked classified.
Had it been on pace, the State Department would have planned to released roughly 8,800 pages of email Thursday, the largest amount yet.
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Clinton turned over the records to the State Department in December 2014, almost two years after leaving office, in response to a request from the department. The emails have been disseminated in increments that allow the department to review the emails and redact sensitive information. Most of the new emails, which may be read right here, do not have fully completed knowledge fields both, making them more constant to look. She has said she chose not to keep 31,000 that her lawyers deemed purely personal.