U.S. Judge Orders Hillary Clinton to Provide Written Testimony on E-mails

Eldonita de Pavel Jacomino
2016-08-22 15:55:28

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Washington, August 22 (RHC)-- A federal judge in the United States has ordered Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton to provide written testimony under oath about why she used a private e-mail server while secretary of state.

The conservative advocacy organization Judicial Watch, which is pursuing a vigorous campaign to expose Clinton’s use of the private server, has filed several lawsuits against her.  And over the weekend, U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan approved a motion by Judicial Watch.  The judge also allowed the legal watchdog to depose a senior State Department aide who had warned two subordinates not to question her email practices.

"Given the extensive public record related to the clintonemail.com system, a record which Judicial Watch has acknowledged, Judicial Watch will be able to anticipate many follow-up questions.  He added that for those follow-up questions that Judicial Watch is unable to anticipate, it can move this Court for permission to serve additional interrogatories."

Judicial Watch welcomed the decision.  The group's president, Tom Fitton, said: “We are pleased that this federal court ordered Hillary Clinton to provide written answers under oath to some key questions about her e-mail scandal.”

Only last month, FBI Director James Comey declined to recommend prosecuting Hillary Clinton, despite evidence she was “extremely careless” in her handling of classified e-mails on her private server as secretary of state.

Yet the controversy refuses to go away.  Last week, the FBI turned over to Congress the documents it recovered from Clinton’s private server.  Hillary Clinton has come under fire for using a private e-mail account and server at her home in New York for official emails when she was America's top diplomat between 2009 and 2013.

Critics, including Republican presidential election rival Donald Trump, say she endangered government secrets and evaded transparency laws.

The State Department’s inspector general said in late May that Clinton’s personal server violated the department’s record-keeping rules and that it would have been rejected had she asked department officials.

Clinton sent about 30,000 emails to the State Department from her tenure as secretary which were then published in batches in line with a court order.



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