New York Post

Hot as hell for Hillary

Judge OKs e-grill

- By BOB FREDERICKS

Hillary Clinton could be grilled under oath about whether she and her aides used her private email server to keep government business secret when she served as secretary of state, a judge ruled Tuesday.

Federal Judge Emmet Sullivan in Washington also ruled that Huma Abedin — wife of sextscarre­d exRep. Anthony Weiner — and other aides to Clinton could be questioned by lawyers for a conservati­ve legal group that has sued for informatio­n about the email server.

The entire server and its contents could also be turned over to the court, Sullivan said — another distractio­n for Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign ahead of next week’s Super Tuesday primaries.

The judge said Judicial Watch can prepare a plan for “narrowly tailored discovery” into Clinton’s use of the server in the basement of her Westcheste­r home during her fouryear stint at the State Department.

“There has been a constant drip, drip, drip of declaratio­ns. When does it stop?” Sullivan said, according to The Washington Post. “This case is about the public’s right to know.”

Sullivan, a Bill Clinton appointee, said he might order subpoenas for Clinton and Abedin to return all records concerning Clinton's private account and not just those that were released after they had been deemed workrelate­d.

Tom Fitton, Judicial Watch’s president, called the ruling “a major victory for the public’s right to know the truth about Hillary Clinton’s email system.”

His group may also seek to have Clinton give testimony.

“While Mrs. Clinton’s testimony may not be required initially,” Fitton said in a statement, “it may happen that her testimony is necessary for the court to resolve the legal issues about her unpreceden­ted email practices.”

Judicial Watch wants to question the aides, and possibly Clinton herself, to determine if the server was used to get around the Freedom of Informatio­n Act.

A State Department rep said it was aware of the ruling but declined further comment. The Obama administra­tion could appeal the decision.

Clinton’s campaign did not immediatel­y comment on the ruling.

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