Hillary Clinton interviewed by FBI over private e-mail use
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Questions over Clinton’s (above) use of a private account and homebrew server during her time as America’s top diplomat have dogged her presidential campaign.
PHOTO: REUTERS
"Out of respect for the investigative process, she will not comment further on her interview."
Clinton, aiming to become the nation's first female commander-in-chief, has apologised for exclusively using a private e-mail account and her own server during her time as secretary of state from 2009 to 2013.
Opponents argue that this breached rules about protecting classified documents from cyber attack and may have amounted to a crime.
Her use of private e-mail for official correspondence first came to light in 2015 during Republican-led congressional investigations into her handling of a militant attack on the US mission in Benghazi, Libya.
The assault in 2012 left the US ambassador and three other Americans dead.
Clinton turned over some 30,000 emails to State Department officials after she stepped down from the job three years ago.
But she also said she deleted more than 30,000 other e-mails that were of a personal nature and not related to her work as secretary of state.
A starkly critical report by the State Department's inspector general found she had not sought permission to conduct official business on her personal account.
The FBI interview came amid revelations that US Attorney-General Loretta Lynch held an impromptu meeting with Clinton's husband, former president Bill Clinton, at the airport in Phoenix, Arizona this week. The exchange touched off a political firestorm.
On Friday, Lynch vowed to respect the decisions of the FBI and prosecutors on whether to charge Hillary Clinton.
The top US law enforcement official admitted that the private encounter with Bill Clinton had "cast a shadow" over the investigation into the emails in the runup to the November general election.
But Lynch insisted that she, as a political appointee, will not overrule investigators or otherwise interfere in the legal process regarding the probe, and that the integrity of the Justice Department will be upheld.
Hillary Clinton's Republican rival in the White House race, Donald Trump, accused her on Friday of having "initiated and demanded" her husband's meeting with Lynch.
"The system is totally rigged. Does anybody really believe that meeting was just a coincidence?" Trump posted on Twitter.
Bill Clinton has known Lynch for years. He nominated her in 1999 to serve as US attorney for the eastern district of New York.


