Wikileaks Publishes Archive of over 30,000 Hillary Clinton Emails

Wikileaks Publishes Archive of over 30,000 Hillary Clinton Emails

Wikileaks has published reams of sensitive information that is bound to make Hillary Clinton squeal with rage.

While the State Department has been releasing emails sent and received by the former Secretary of State on her private server, the department has made them available in small increments, making it hard for the American public to keep track of each and every email as it came out.

Thanks to Wikileaks, however, over 30,000 Clinton emails have been made available in a handy archive that allows people to search through them with ease. The time frame of the documents ranges from June 30th, 2010 to August 12th, 2014 and numbers 50,547 documents in total.

This will be a most unwelcome development for Clinton, as the emails will allow Americans to see her response (or lack thereof) to the 2012 terrorist attack on the US consulate in Benghazi themselves. One can’t help but want to see the look on her face when she found out Wikileaks released them.

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But the thousands of emails made available by Wikileaks are just the tip of the iceberg that is Clinton’s perfidy. Already, the State Department is moving to look over communications from one of the former First Lady’s staff members, effectively casting it’s net further:

“Though the department has completed its publication of Clinton emails, it is now set to review 29,000 pages of emails sent or received by Huma Abedin, who served as Clinton’s deputy chief of staff from 2009-13. The department has said it plans to review at least 400 pages of Abedin’s emails every month. Completion is expected by April 2017.

While Wikileaks’ Wednesday release involved publicly available documents, the site has gained a reputation for illegally leaking classified information, including from the State Department. Army Pvt. Bradley Manning, now known as Chelsea Manning, is serving a 35-year prison sentence for leaking documents to the site both from the State and Defense Departments.

The site has also published files stolen from defense firm Stratfor, the Saudi Foreign Ministry and the National Security Agency, among others.”

Source: Washington Examiner



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