With less than two weeks to go until Election Day025 Archives the Clinton camp was hit with another email surprise upon landing in Cedar Rapids, Iowa on Friday.
FBI officials announced the discovery of new Hillary Clinton emails that appear related to the closed investigation into her use of a private server, according to the New York Times. They were found during a federal investigation into New York politician Anthony Weiner's sexting with a 15-year-old girl.
SEE ALSO: Hillary Clinton responded to viral Death Row Records meme
Weiner and his soon-to-be ex-wife Huma Abedin, a top Clinton aide, had their electronic devices seized as part of that investigation.
The whole episode renews the Clinton email saga once again, just 11 days before the polls close - and it appears the Clinton camp had little time to prepare.
Several journalists on Twitter said Friday Wi-Fi was down on the plane, so the Democratic candidate's campaign pretty much heard the news when everyone else did.
Of note as we wait for Clinton: plane had no wi-fi today. One adviser after we landed: "We're learning about this just like you all are." pic.twitter.com/CjsH71LJNo
— Phil Mattingly (@Phil_Mattingly) October 28, 2016
CNN reporting Hillary Clinton plane didn't have wifi, clearly had "no idea" this was coming until landed. #FBI
— Anna Davlantes (@AnnaDavlantes) October 28, 2016
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The White House also seemed to be out of the loop.
NEW: White House was informed of FBI Director's letter to Congress on Clinton email investigation through media reports - @alex_mallin
— ABC News (@ABC) October 28, 2016
Mashablehas reached out to the Clinton campaign for clarification.
The plane made the trip to Cedar Rapids for a rally there. It appears Clinton didn't immediately answer any questions about the renewed FBI probe upon landing.
.@HillaryClinton lands in #iowa and ignores questions about @fbi probe. Voice c/o Fox embed @tamaragitt pic.twitter.com/AqxNzPeAPb
— Michael Mathes (@MichaelMathes) October 28, 2016
FBI Director James Comey had addressed the newly discovered emails in a letter to Congress. Even though the emails were found during the Weiner sexting case, Comey said they "appear to be pertinent to the [Clinton emails] investigation."
However, it's unclear whether the FBI is actually reopening the Clinton email investigation — a point emphasized by Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta, who asked Comey to "immediately provide the American public more information."
"Already, we have seen characterizations that the FBI is 'reopening' an investigation but Comey's words do not match that characterization," Podesta said in a statement.
"Director Comey's letter refers to emails that have come to light in an unrelated case, but we have no idea what those emails are and the Director himself notes they may not even be significant."
Still, the FBI even mentioning Clinton emails again has got the Donald Trump campaign feeling pretty giddy. Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway tweeted "A great day in our campaign just got even better. FBI reviewing new emails in Clinton probe."
And of course, Trump himself took full advantage of the situation at a rally in New Hampshire.
We must not let #CrookedHillary take her CRIMINAL SCHEME into the Oval Office. #DrainTheSwamp pic.twitter.com/GtPkj4xIz6
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 28, 2016
Clinton addressed the issue later on Friday, saying she was confident investigators won't find information that would cause the FBI to change its decision to close the investigation without filing charges in July.
She also called on the FBI to release more information about its review, saying "let's get it out."
The Associated Press contributed reporting.
Shein’s valuation drops to $45 billion amid investigations and stalling IPO: report · TechNodeElectric vertical takeoff and landing craft completes first flight in Shenzhen · TechNodeDouyin joins lowChina unveils first batch of imported game licenses in 2024 · TechNodeChinese EVs’ share of global market rose in 2023: industry group · TechNodeOnePlus offers a refund for OnePlus 12R 256GB phone after inaccurate UFS 4.0 claim · TechNodeTablet PC shipments decline by 10% ySpaceX launches moon lander, lands booster despite tough conditionsVolkswagen China names new technology chief to step up EV, software rollout · TechNodeWeChat now allows direct joining of DingTalk meetings · TechNodePeking University partners with local AI firm to “reproduce” Sora amid GenAI frenzy · TechNodeUS aims to restrict China's tech access to US cloud services for training AI · TechNodeHuawei’s selfXiaomi 14 Ultra to debut at the MWC 2024 · TechNodeChinese couriers complain over new doorLi Auto shares surge after first annual profit · TechNodeHuawei’s selfShein’s valuation drops to $45 billion amid investigations and stalling IPO: report · TechNodeTrip.com’s Q4 revenue doubles, CEO announces discontinuation of 2019 as a benchmark · TechNodeHuawei’s self “The Ecstatic, The Hermetic, and the Strange” 10 social media trends that changed the internet in 2022 Daily Cartoon: 1976, The Hite Report Tinder introduces Relationship Goals profile feature It’s Time to Get in Touch with Your Inner Grotesque Elon Musk polls Twitter on fate of suspended journalists, gets told the obvious Me for the Woods: Into the Wilderness for Thoreau’s Bicentennial American Sounds: The Old, Weird Days of National Public Radio The Uncanny Double: An Interview with Megan McDowell Best deals of the day Dec. 13: Schwinn exercise bike, a 75 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for November 14, 2023 Searching for Yourself? Try the Closet Sam Bankman 8 Best Bose Black Friday deals: QuietComfort Earbuds II and more Solomon D. Butcher’s Photographs Celebrate the Pioneer 'Uber Tasks' is like Uber Eats. But you'll get completed chores instead of food. Pornhub's Year in Review 2022 has insights into porn women like The Designs of the Jazz Age (It Wasn’t All Cocktail Shakers and Dresses) We’re Called “The Paris Review,” But We’ve Got Nothing for Bastille Day Can AI Write Pop Songs? On Music and Machine Language
1.9503s , 8226.6796875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2025 Archives】,Exquisite Information Network