WASHINGTON — A conservative watchdog group on Tuesday released 296 pages of emails from former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s personal server, including many exchanges that weren’t handed over to the government as part of the Democratic nominee’s archive.

The new emails, released by the group Judicial Watch, offer fresh examples of how top Clinton Foundation officials sought access to the State Department during Clinton’s tenure. The documents were obtained through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit filed by Judicial Watch against the State Department.

Read:Clinton pulling away from Trump in battlefield states, new poll finds

A spokesman for the Clinton Foundation, a nonprofit organization established by former President Bill Clinton, didn’t immediately return requests for comment. Hillary Clinton had attached her name to the foundation after she left the U.S. government and subsequently removed it when she started her presidential campaign.

In an exchange from April 2009, a longtime aide to Bill Clinton told three of Hillary Clinton’s top advisers that it was “important to take care of” a particular person, whose name has been redacted from the document. That person had written the aide, Doug Band, under the subject line “A favor…” to thank him for the “opportunity to go on the Haiti trip,” which the person called “eye-opening.” Band was a chief adviser in helping Bill Clinton launch the Clinton Foundation after leaving the White House.

Huma Abedin, a longtime confidante of Clinton who is now working for her campaign, replied to Band: “We have all had him on our radar. Personnel has been sending him options.” Band responded: “Great.” Band was an important figure in helping Bill Clinton set up his postpresidential career and has since co-founded a New York company called Teneo Holdings.

Trump’s Second Amendment Comment: a Threat to Clinton?

While at the State Department, Abedin received a special designation that allowed her to work at the agency while also doing outside work. During that period, she held two other positions, at the Clinton Foundation and at Teneo.

The latest emails provided further fodder for Republicans who have been critical of Hillary Clinton’s ties to her family’s foundation during her time at the State Department. While Clinton is no longer involved with the foundation, her husband and daughter, Chelsea, continue to attend the foundation’s events. Bill Clinton said in June that he would have to rethink his role at the foundation and its fundraising if his wife is elected president in November.

“That the Clinton Foundation was calling in favors barely 3 months into Hillary Clinton’s tenure at the State Department is deeply troubling, and it is yet another reminder of the conflicts of interest and unethical wheeling and dealing she’d bring to the White House,” said Michael Short, a spokesman for the Republican National Committee, in a statement Tuesday.

An expanded version of this report appears on WSJ.com.