Emails
from Clinton private account were recently classified
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[August 01, 2015]
By Alistair Bell and Jonathan Allen
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Dozens of emails on
the private email account that Hillary Clinton used when secretary of
state were recently classified by the government, the State Department
said on Friday, giving Republican critics more ammunition against the
Democratic presidential hopeful.
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The emails, released by the State Department under a judge's
order, date from the early period of Clinton's 2009-2013 tenure as
America's top diplomat.
Many of them were heavily redacted and marked as "confidential" only
this week before they were made public, meaning that Clinton was not
aware when she sent or received them that their content might later
be regarded as classified.
The front-runner for the Democratic nomination in the November, 2016
election, Clinton is under scrutiny for using a private email
account for her work as secretary of state.
Opponents accuse her of playing loose with secret information and
transparency laws, but Clinton says she broke no laws or rules by
eschewing a standard government email account.
The 1,356 emails released on Friday were the third batch
from 30,000 or so emails from Clinton's private account that she
handed over to the State Department after she left office. She says
she had another 30,000 emails deleted because they were private.
A judge ordered the State Department to release in batches the
30,000 in its possession. State Department spokesman Mark Toner said
government agencies that reviewed the latest collection before
release deemed that 37 of them contain material that is
"confidential," the lowest level of classification.
The government has to believe information could cause damage to
national security to mark it confidential.
"As we go through the contents of these e-mails... we need to look
at whether portions of them need to be upgraded in terms of
classification," Toner told reporters.
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"These were upgraded to confidential, so none of these documents
were classified at the time they were sent," he said.
The classified emails released on Friday dealt with a range of
topics from Lebanon to Myanmar.
While Clinton is way ahead in polls of Democratic candidates,
several surveys have found a majority of voters find her
untrustworthy, a perception exacerbated by the email
controversy.
"Today’s email dump shows Hillary Clinton put even more sensitive
government information at risk on her secret email server than
previously known," Republican National Committee spokesman Michael
Short said.
"Hillary Clinton’s reckless attempt to bypass public records laws
put our national security at risk and shows she cannot be trusted in
the White House," he added.
(Reporting By Alistair Bell; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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