A federal judge ruled on Tuesday that U.S. State Department officials and aides to Hillary Clinton
should be questioned under oath about whether the former secretary of
state's use of a private email system was an effort to skirt open
records laws.
The ruling by U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan is likely to add to the uncertainty hovering over Clinton, the front-runner for the Democratic
nomination for the November U.S. presidential election, about the legal
consequences of her decision to exclusively use a private email server
in her New York home for her government work.
The
State Department and Judicial Watch, the conservative watchdog group
that sought the depositions as it sues for records about the employment
of a senior Clinton aide, must agree on a plan for the depositions by
April, Sullivan said in his order on Tuesday, according to court
documents.
Sullivan, a judge in federal court in
Washington, D.C., said there was at least "a reasonable suspicion" that
open records laws were undermined, the Washington Post reported. Sullivan, who was appointed by Clinton's husband, former President Bill Clinton,
said he may order the department to subpoena Clinton to return all
records connected to her private email server, the newspaper reported.
Clinton
returned about 30,000 emails to the State Department in 2014, but said
she deleted thousands of others her staff deemed not to be work-related.
Judicial
Watch told the court it wanted to get sworn testimony from several
senior State Department officials and Clinton associates who set up or
knew about the system or dealt with requests from the public for copies
of Clinton's records, according to court documents. That could include
Patrick Kennedy, the department's under secretary for management, and
Cheryl Mills, Clinton's former chief of staff at the department, among
others, the group said. In a statement to the media, the group said it
may later seek to have Clinton testify under oath.
The
State Department said it was reviewing the order but could not comment
further on ongoing litigation. The department may appeal the ruling.
Clinton,
who apologized last year for the setup, believes at least some of the
inquiries into her emails are politically motivated.
"This
is one of several lawsuits filed by the same right-wing group, which
will stop at nothing in pursuing the Clintons, just as they have done
since the 1990s," Clinton spokesman Nick Merrill said in an email.
At
least 1,700 of the emails from Clinton's unsecured server contain
classified information, according to the State Department, including
closely held secrets from the country's spy agencies. The arrangement is
being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the State
Department's internal watchdog and several Republican-controlled
congressional committees.
Clinton's rival for the
Democratic nomination, U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, has
declined to criticize Clinton's email arrangement while campaigning.
Republican opponents have not held back, with several urging that
Clinton be prosecuted for mishandling government secrets.
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