WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange has promised that an upcoming email release will provide enough evidence to ensure Hillary Clinton's arrest. (Reuters photo) |
We already have the FBI reopening its investigation into her private email server used while she was secretary of state. There are still thousands of the promised 50,000 emails yet to be released as part of the "Podesta Emails" dossier, but Assange has assured the world this next round will offer "enough evidence to see Hillary Clinton arrested."
The latest document dump—the 25th so far—just went live in the past hour. Here are some of the latest WikiLeaks-related headlines:
'Dump Those Emails'
In an email dated March 2, 2015, Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta wrote to her former chief of staff, who was serving as her personal attorney, "On another matter....and not to sound like Lanny, but we are going to have to dump all those emails so better to do so sooner than later." It's not clear what those emails were, but Platte River Networks deleted the server and used BleachBit on it sometime in the March 25-31 time frame, according to congressional testimony.
Podesta: Foundation Donations Meant to 'Curry Favor'
In February of 2015, a report about foreign donations to the Clinton Foundation raised the concern of high-ranking members of the Clinton campaign team—even though she wasn't officially a candidate yet. A lengthy email exchange led to this comment from Podesta: "I think [Jimmy] Carter went on an endowment drive with similar results. Not sure who was currying favor with him. Might have been a few years ago. Don't know whether they report. Bruce Lindsey would know."
Google's Chairman Had a Plan for the Election
In April 2015, about a month before Clinton officially announced her campaign, Google Chairman Eric Schmidt sent an email to Cheryl Mills, outlining his "thoughts on a 2016 campaign." He prefaces the memo by writing, "Cheryl, I have put together my thoughts on the campaign ideas and I have scheduled some meetings in the next few weeks for veterans of the campaign to tell me how to make these ideas better. This is simply a draft but do let me know if this is a helpful process for you all."
Please, Tell Us What You Really Think
In March of 2015, Podesta received an "unvarnished assessment" of the leading candidates to become the next Commander of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The email reveals what the Obama administration really thought of its top generals.
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