A Hillary Clinton campaign spokesman called out FBI Director James Comey Friday for causing a "wildfire of innuendo" related to Clinton's email scandal.

Brian Fallon appeared on CNN's "The Situation Room" and told host Wolf Blitzer the campaign is in the dark as to what the FBI is talking about in regards to its reopening of Clinton's email case.

"The facts of the matter is that you're reporting stuff that is unknown to us," Fallon said. "It just makes it even more incumbent on Director Comey to put forward the real facts here.

"If these are emails that belong to an aide, as opposed to Hillary Clinton, the voters should know that. If these were emails that were not taken from her server equipment, which was the subject of the investigation that was concluded several months ago, the voters should know that."

Reports Friday afternoon said the new evidence that convinced the FBI to take another look at the case came from electronic devices owned by Clinton aide Huma Abedin and her estranged husband, former Rep. Anthony Weiner. Weiner is the subject of a separate FBI investigation dealing with sexually graphic texts he sent to a 15-year-old girl.

Fallon said the timing of the FBI's announcement, less than two weeks before the Nov. 8 presidential election, means there needs to be more information presented.

"At this point, innuendo should not be a substitute for fact," Fallon said. "If you're going to introduce something into the campaign conversation with 11 days to go until the general election, you owe it to provide full information to the voters.

"Director Comey is just unleashing a wildfire of innuendo, of anonymously sourced reports, of Republicans mischaracterizing what the letter says. It's incumbent on Director Comey: stand up, hold another press conference, answer questions, provide more information."