Are people finally wising up to Hillary Clinton’s suspect electronic communications?
On Friday, a federal judge agreed to reopen a 2012 lawsuit filed by Judicial Watch that is aimed toward accessing the otherwise concealed emails from Clinton’s private server in New York.
From the Washington Times:
Both sides agreed that the revelation that Mrs. Clinton had kept her own email server separate from the government, and exclusively used her own email account created on that server, meant that she had shielded her messages from valid open-records requests.
Though the lawsuit was initially dismissed, the court has since changed its tune amid revelations about Clinton’s private email.
Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton championed the decision as a “significant development.”
“It points to the fraud by this administration and Mrs. Clinton,” Fitton declared.
Hillary has received intense scrutiny since reports first surfaced in March that she exclusively used a private email system while at the State Department.
As she makes a bid for president, the former secretary of State has been quite tight-lipped about the controversy, minimally addressing it at a press conference during which she admitted that she turned over about 30,000 emails her staff deemed work-related to the government but deleted the remaining 32,000 from her server.
Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.), who chairs the House Select Committee on Benghazi, has been particularly passionate in his pursuit of Clinton’s electronic correspondences. Clinton is set to testify before the committee regarding the 2012 terror attack on the U.S. consulate in Libya.