Six batches of Clinton-related documents we're still waiting to see

As Hillary Clinton's campaign struggles to move on from the controversy over her private email use, a slow progression of documents emerging from the State Department and the FBI could force the Democratic nominee to confront revelations about her past dealings until election day and beyond.

At least a half dozen media outlets and watchdog groups have sued the administration in search of records related to Clinton's time as secretary of state. Many of those lawsuits, as well as outstanding congressional requests, will produce documents that raise thorny questions about the Clinton Foundation, the speaking engagements for which she and her husband were paid and the private email server that landed her under investigation by the FBI.

The State Department has pushed back against multiple Freedom of Information Act cases in court by arguing it does not have the resources to process such a high volume of records in the short time that remains before voters select the next president.

But the thousands of pages under review for public release could prolong the scrutiny of Clinton's State Department tenure with the kind of piecemeal developments that have come to define the controversies of her candidacy.

Bill Clinton's speech schedules

The State Department has stonewalled a pair of FOIA requests for schedules related to the highly-paid speeches Bill Clinton delivered while his wife served as secretary of state.
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