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Via Bloomberg:

Almost a year after it was first reported that Hillary Clinton used a private e-mail server for communications as secretary of state, the department is to release the final batch of the Democratic presidential candidate’s messages sometime Monday — the end of months of piecemeal disclosure that often frustrated the campaign and subjected it to criticism from both sides of the aisle.
Efforts to investigate her time as the nation’s top diplomat and find wrongdoing there, however, are just beginning.

As they did under her husband’s presidency, conservatives have spent months or even years setting up investigations into Clinton. Using federal disclosure laws and the power of congressional inquiry, the critics are now increasingly focusing not on the candidate but to a small circle of her aides, some of whom have worked for her for years and now serve in key roles on her campaign. Evidence may become public as the presidential race heats up, the critics say.

On Feb. 23, for instance, U.S. District Court Judge Emmet Sullivan in Washington ruled that the conservative government transparency group Judicial Watch was entitled to gather evidence in a lawsuit it filed seeking paperwork on Clinton aide Huma Abedin’s authorization to do outside work while employed by the State Department.

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