Irked judge sets time for U.S. to yield Clinton files

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton listens to a home care worker during a roundtable discussion on home care, Thursday, Aug. 6, 2015, in Los Angeles.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton listens to a home care worker during a roundtable discussion on home care, Thursday, Aug. 6, 2015, in Los Angeles.

WASHINGTON -- Impatient with years of delays, a federal judge Friday gave the State Department some tight deadlines to provide The Associated Press with thousands of pages of documents related to Hillary Rodham Clinton -- a timetable that means many of the files should be released well before the U.S. presidential primary elections.

Friday's order came one week after U.S. District Judge Richard Leon chastised the department for its slowness in satisfying years-old records requests, including for Clinton's schedules and calendars.

The Associated Press sued in March after the department failed to turn over files requested under the Freedom of Information Act, including one request made more than five years ago.

Since then, the State Department has said it struggled to meet the news agency's demand on time because of limited staff resources and thousands of other pending requests. But at a hearing last month, Leon -- who was appointed by President George W. Bush -- appeared troubled that the document requests had gone unsatisfied and said at least part of what The Associated Press wanted could be processed with ease by "the least ambitious bureaucrat."

State Department spokesman Mark Toner said the department was aware of the judge's order but wouldn't comment further on a pending lawsuit.

It was not immediately clear whether the State Department will comply with the judge's order or ask an appeals court to give it more time, though the judge said the agency must alert him if it feels that it cannot meet any part of the deadline.

"We are very pleased Judge Leon set a tight production schedule for review and release of these public documents," Associated Press general counsel Karen Kaiser said in a statement. "We remain committed to the goal of getting this important information released to the public as quickly as possible."

The State Department will have 30 days to produce roughly 68 pages of documents related to Clinton's former top aide, Huma Abedin. The State Department last week asked Abedin's lawyers to preserve and return to the government any federal records that Abedin might have in her possession.

Within 90 days, the judge said, the department must turn over nearly 5,000 pages of calendars and schedules from Clinton's four years as secretary of state.

In addition, the State Department will have eight months to produce 13,387 pages of materials concerning its oversight of military contractor BAE Systems during the years Clinton served as secretary of state. The British firm settled with the Justice Department in February 2010 to end a long-running investigation into its overseas contracts and later agreed to pay a $79 million fine to the State Department and submit to auditing and oversight. So far, after more than two years, the State Department had turned over seven pages to The Associated Press.

A Section on 08/08/2015

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