A conservative watchdog group received the final tranche of emails recovered by the FBI from former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that were transmitted on her unauthorized, private email system.

On Thursday, Judicial Watch released the final 756 pages of emails that it will get from the yearslong case.

Thursday's release reveals classified correspondence between Clinton and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair in 2011 regarding Palestinian issues. Additionally, the emails show a classified conversation between the former secretary of state and longtime Clinton family confidant Lanny Davis, who is now representing President Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen. In that conversation, Davis offered to serve as a private line of communication between Clinton and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The new batch of emails also shows that Clinton’s secretary Lauren Jiloty sent Clinton’s daily itinerary to her unsecure email account five separate times.

Judicial Watch obtained the emails after filing a Freedom Of Information Act lawsuit in 2015, seeking “All emails sent and received by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in her official capacity as Secretary of State, as well as all emails by other State Department employees to Secretary Clinton regarding her non-'state.gov' email address.”

Judicial Watch said the case is now closed and the FBI in total was only able to recover or find approximately 5,000 of the 33,000 government emails that an employee managing Clinton's server deleted.

As a next step, Judicial Watch is urging Attorney General William Barr to initiate a new investigation into Clinton’s use of an unauthorized email server.

“We continue to uncover the mishandling of classified information in Hillary Clinton emails that she tried to hide or destroy. This is further evidence of the urgency for the DOJ to finally undertake a complete and legitimate criminal investigation,” Judicial Watch president Tom Fitton said in a statement. “Attorney General Barr should immediately order a new investigation of the Hillary Clinton email scandal.”

The FBI concluded its investigation into Clinton's emails in July 2016, culminating in a press conference where then-Director James Comey said Clinton and her colleagues were "extremely careless" in handling classified information, but also said "no reasonable prosecutor" would bring a case against Clinton.

Despite reopening the case again just before October, the FBI again closed the case days before the 2016 election without reaching any new conclusions.