Hillary Clinton's longtime aide, Cheryl Mills, recently gave a deposition with Judicial Watch, which has numerous lawsuits going over the former secretary of state's email system.

But she responded "I don't recall" 40 times.

And "I don't know" another 182 times.

Get a first-hand account of the Democratic Party presidential front-runner's character in "Hillary The Other Woman." Then take action with the Hillary Clinton Investigative Justice Project and let others know, with a bumper sticker calling for "Hillary for prosecution, not president."

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It's all because, apparently, she was too busy, too stressed or not sufficiently expert to have appreciated the legal implications of Hillary Clinton's decision to use two BlackBerry phones to run the State Department.

Her communications all went through a personal service sitting in her Chappaqua, New York, home.

Now a team has coalesced to re-create the questions and answers.

The video comes from ClintonEmailsOnFilm, and it's been posted on YouTube.

It's also here:

The re-creation comes through the 270-page transcript of the questioning that was released shortly after it was completed.

In addition to the "I don't know" responses, her lawyers, three of them, and another four from the Department of Justice, interrupted Judicial Watch lawyers some 250 times, about 35 times an hour, with objections.

The testimony is part of a lawsuit by Judicial Watch related to Clinton's use of a private server. Mills' deposition is among seven of former Clinton top aides and State Department officials that the Washington watchdog has held, or scheduled.

Among the exchanges:

Asked if she communicated with Clinton by email about the Benghazi attacks, Mills responded:

Mills: I may have, I don’t recall. Because in real time obviously her office is about, happily, or sadly, five to seven feet from mine. And so given the set of events that were happening in that time period, there was a lot of, obviously, direct communication.

As an immediate follow-up, Mills was asked, “OK, did you communicate with Ms. Abedin [Huma Abedin, Clinton’s deputy chief of staff at the State Department] about the Benghazi attacks via email?”

Mills responded:

Mills: I absolutely might have. I don’t have a recollection of doing that, but I might have.

Tom Fitton, Judicial Watch president, told WND the deposition included valuable information that he estimated would be very important as the other Judicial Watch depositions in the Clinton email scandal develop.

“We now know more than we did prior to Mills’ testimony regarding the Clinton email system,” Fitton told WND, “but there remain many important questions yet to be answered.”

Get a first-hand account of the Democratic Party presidential front-runner's character in "Hillary The Other Woman." Then take action with the Hillary Clinton Investigative Justice Project and let others know, with a bumper sticker calling for "Hillary for prosecution, not president."