Hillary Clinton's email scandal roared back to life Friday
after the FBI released a report detailing her interview with investigators.
Mr. Kendall said he confirmed with Mrs. Clinton’s support
staff that no emails from the time she was in office “reside on the server or
on any backup systems associated with the server. The documents include a summary of her July
interview with FBI agents as well as a detailed chronology of steps that
investigators took in deciding whether criminal charges were warranted. But
Mrs. Clinton’s lawyer, David Kendall, said in a letter to Congress on March 27,
2015, that after Mrs. Clinton gave roughly 30,000 work-related emails to the
State Department.
Mrs. Clinton’s use of the private server has shadowed her
presidential campaign for a year and a half. And the newly disclosed records,
while largely reinforcing what had already been known about the F.B.I.
investigation, provided Republicans more ammunition to attack the Democratic
nominee’s judgment and honesty as she heads into the final, post-Labor Day
phase of the campaign. Mrs. Clinton “chose not to keep” her personal emails
while she was secretary of state, who she has said numbered roughly 30,000.” The
FBI took the unusual step of releasing to the public documents related to its
yearlong investigation into Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server
while secretary of state.
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