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State Dept. to release more than 7000 Clinton emails
But State Department spokesman Mark Toner insisted that the information redacted from Clinton’s emails was not classified at the time but had been determined to contain sensitive material later on.
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The Secretary of State has been under fire for using a private computer server for her works while still in the office.
Critics have claimed that the veteran former top diplomat used the private account to avoid transparency and scrutiny.
Then, in another one of about 7,000 emails, communications aide Philippe Reines informs her that her new iPad is in.
None of the emails in the latest batch has been designated now classified, he added.
Concerns over Clinton’s email use began to plague her campaign even before her official announcement in April that she was running for president. In an email released from Hillary Clinton’s personal account, it’s apparent that she takes a liking to shows like Parks and Recreation and The Good Wife.
You might also be wondering why all of these emails are being released, and that is because a federal judge ordered the State Department to regularly process and release the emails that Clinton has already turned over.
– A 2010 note to Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, asking him not to publish 250,000 classified documents, saying releasing the information would endanger “the lives of countless individuals.”
The State Department hopes that by the end of January all of them are all exposed and out for the communal.
After the fourth and largest batch of emails was released, we’ve been getting to know the former Secretary of State on a very intimate level!
Republican front-runner Donald Trump has repeatedly compared Clinton’s email scandal to that of retired Central Intelligence Agency Director, Gen. David Petraeus, who earlier this year plead guilty to a misdemeanor charge of mishandling classified information.
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While Clinton has repeatedly described the email controversy as one dwelled upon by journalists and her political opponents, she changed her tone somewhat last week, allowing that some members of the public do have legitimate questions about the issue.