State Department to review 29,000 pages of Clinton aide's emails

Hillary Clinton, right, greets supporters alongside longtime aide Huma Abedin, left, after a Democratic presidential primary debate Saturday, Dec. 19, 2015, at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, N.H.
Hillary Clinton, right, greets supporters alongside longtime aide Huma Abedin, left, after a Democratic presidential primary debate Saturday, Dec. 19, 2015, at Saint Anselm College in Manchester, N.H.

WASHINGTON — The State Department has agreed to review 29,000 pages of emails from Huma Abedin, a close aide to Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, from their days at the State Department for possible public release under a new legal agreement with a conservative legal group.

But even as Clinton presses her campaign, many of the emails would not be publicly released until six months after the election.

Under a schedule adopted Monday by U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell, lawyers for the State Department and the conservative group Judicial Watch agreed that the agency will start in March a lengthy review and release of thousands of emails that Abedin sent or received on Clinton's private computer server between 2009 and 2013. Abedin was deputy chief of staff for Clinton during Clinton's four-year stint as secretary of state and is now vice chair of Clinton's 2016 campaign organization, traveling constantly with Clinton to Democratic Party caucus and primary states.

Abedin's emails are at issue because Clinton's own emails, released publicly by the State Department in recent months, showed that Abedin served as an influential sounding board for Clinton. She acted as a key gatekeeper and was often emailed by others inside and outside by the department when they wanted to reach Clinton. The Clinton emails also showed that Abedin frequently communicated with her from her own account on the Clinton server.

Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton said his group sought the Abedin documents "given the intersection of Mrs. Clinton's private and public interests and the constant fundraising of the Clinton Foundation." After her resignation from the State Department in 2013, Hillary Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, ran the foundation until she stepped down from that role when she announced her run for the presidency.

The court agreement calls for the State Department to review for release 400 Abedin emails each month starting March 1, but the public production of documents will not be completed until April 30, 2017, six months after the November presidential election.

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