IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Judge Orders State Department to Get FBI Findings on Clinton E-Mails

The Thursday order involves a side issue in the controversy — a FOIA inquiry about an employment arrangement involving top aide Huma Abedin.
Get more newsLiveon

A federal judge on Thursday ordered the State Department to keep in close touch with the FBI about what investigators find on Hillary Clinton's e-mail server.

And the judge indicated he thought her decision to conduct official business on a private e-mail account was unwise.

"We wouldn't be here today if the employee had followed government policy," said District Court Judge Emmet Sullivan, referring to the former secretary of state.

"There was a violation of government policy," he said.

The Thursday order involves a side issue in the e-mail controversy — a Freedom of Information Act inquiry about an employment arrangement that allowed top Clinton aide Huma Abedin to do outside consulting while working at the State Department.

Sullivan directed the State Department to ask for a response from the FBI about whether investigators find anything on the Clinton e-mail server or on the thumb drives related to Abedin's work arrangement.

The State Department said earlier that a search of the 55,000 pages of e-mails turned over by Mrs. Clinton's lawyer contained nothing about the Abedin contract. Now the judge says the State Department must ask the FBI for any e-mails its investigators find on the servers related to the contract that wasn't in the e-mails.

Sullivan wants a progress report in 30 days and has scheduled a status hearing for Oct. 1 at 10 am.

It's not clear whether the FBI will be able to find anything on the servers, given that they were "wiped" to erase the contents, though FBI officials have said they are optimistic they can recover at least some data.