The Big Three's morning newscasts on Monday all offered coverage of the latest Wikileaks release of John Podesta e-mails, but only CBS This Morning pointed out the New York Times's Sunday report on how "Hillary Clinton's inner circle built a web of private and public interest in Haiti and Africa when she was secretary of state. Clinton's State Department chief of staff Cheryl Mills helped a South Korean garment maker open a factory in Haiti. The company then became a Clinton Foundation donor." Charlie Rose spotlighted the newspaper's revelation during a lead-in for its Wikileaks segment. [video below]

During her report, correspondent Julianna Goldman detailed how Mrs. Clinton "delivered [a speech] to Goldman Sachs employees in 2013...[and] says she had 'great relations' with Wall Street as senator." Goldman also zeroed in on the Democrat's apparent flip-flopping on the controversy surrounding the Keystone XL pipeline:

JULIANNA GOLDMAN: The e-mails also show how her campaign grappled with the political ramifications of Clinton changing her stance on the controversial Keystone pipeline. HILLARY CLINTON, (D), PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE: I don't think it's in the best interest of what we need to do to combat climate change. GOLDMAN: But roughly two weeks before publicly opposing the Keystone pipeline in 2015, Clinton had harsh words for environmentalists; and said activists should 'get a life' while in a meeting with the building trade union.

The CBS journalist later featured two soundbites from UCLA political science professor Lynn Vavreck, who asserted that "without Donald Trump out there stepping on this story, we probably would be talking about the Clinton e-mails more. But that doesn't mean that their effect on voters would be bigger."

On Monday's Today, NBC's Andrea Mitchell also highlighted Mrs. Clinton's Wall Street speeches:

ANDREA MITCHELL: ...[A]s a highly paid speaker, Clinton appears to have told the bankers, 'The people that know the industry better than anybody are the people who work in the industry.' In the e-mails released by Wikileaks — not authenticated by Clinton or NBC News — she also said new banking regulations after the 2008 crisis were passed for 'political reasons,' and 'the jury is still out' on the 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law. And a stolen e-mail...to campaign chairman John Podesta and others last October reveals Clinton decided to oppose the TPP trade deal she once supported even before seeing the final version, contrary to her later claim.

However, Mitchell omitted the New York Times reporting on Mills and the Clinton Foundation's shady dealings in Haiti and Africa.

ABC's Cecilia Vega introduced her Wikileaks report on Monday's Good Morning America by touting how "the Clinton campaign calls this a crime reminiscent of WaterGate, but worse." Like Goldman on CBS, Vega mentioned how Mrs. Clinton's "private speeches to Wall Street...seem to contradict her public positions — even this one, claiming Clinton told a private trade union gathering that extreme environmentalists need to — quote, 'get a life.' " However, like Mitchell, she ignored the Times's Sunday article on the Clintons and Mills.

The full transcript of Julianna Goldman's report from CBS This Morning on October 17, 2016: