A new batch of e-mails sent and received by top Hillary Clinton confidante Huma Abedin during her time at the State Department were released by Judicial Watch on Monday.
Clinton’s team likely will point to one message, at least, as evidence that they secured classified information even while conducting government business on a private e-mail server. Judicial Watch, the conservative group embroiled in a series of Freedom of Information Act lawsuits to obtain Clinton’s correspondence, says that the e-mails show a lack of caution about sensitive information.
“These e-mails Judicial Watch forced out through a federal lawsuit show that Huma Abedin used her separate clintonemail.com account to conduct the most sensitive government business, endangering not only her safety but the safety of Hillary Clinton and countless others,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton in a Monday statement.
In one message, a State Department official e-mailed Abedin to suggest an earlier-than-planned arrival in Geneva, Switzerland following a visit to Russia, in part because they couldn’t access a classified network in St. Petersburg. “It would be a lot better for us to work through the night there (with access to classified) than be stuck in St. Pete with no classified at all,” the official wrote.
Abedin, who had “no idea about comms,” agreed that Clinton would need a secure workspace. “Makes total sense,” she replied.