The FBI will be forced to reveal details on Tuesday about why it decided to suddenly reopen its investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails during the final days of the election, a move that many Democrats have blamed for costing Clinton the election.

Judge P. Kevin Castel ordered a court to unseal the FBI search warrant for Clinton-related emails that were discovered on a laptop belonging to disgraced former congressman Anthony Weiner in October.

The warrant, the FBI’s application for the warrant, and an affidavit justifying the warrant will be released to the public on Tuesday.

The documents released this week could include details on why investigators believed Weiner’s laptop contained information relevant to the Clinton probe. The Clinton campaign has blamed her November loss on the unexpected reopening of the FBI investigation into her private email server.

Huma Abedin was Hillary Clinton's longest serving and most loyal aide and was drawn into the reopening of the Hillary email investigation by her estranged husband after the FBI launched an investigation into his sexting relationship with a 15-year-old girl

Authorities had obtained Weiner’s computer during a separate investigation into sexual messages he exchanged with a 15-year-old girl.

DailyMail.com broke the story last September: Weiner carried on a months-long online sexual relationship with the teen during which she claimed he asked her to dress up in 'school-girl' outfits for him on a video messaging application and pressed her to engage in 'rape fantasies'.

Following the report the FBI launched an investigation into the disgraced congressman.

Judge Castel’s order on Monday indicated that the ‘criminal investigation’ into Weiner is ongoing. Weiner and Abedin are referred to as Subject 1 and Subject 2 in the documents, as the FBI have never publicly acknowledged their identities.

The judge granted the government’s request to redact ‘information regarding the criminal investigation.’

Serial sexter Weiner tweeted this photos of himself wearing grey underpants showing obvious signs of sexual arousal

In the message to teen which were obtained by the Dailymail.com, Weiner repeatedly complimented the girl's body, told her that she made him 'hard'. He also sent the girl a selfie from a hot tub

The ruling also indicated that Weiner’s name and the name of his wife, Clinton aide Huma Abedin, would be redacted in the unsealed documents.

Because FBI director James Comey said publicly that the investigation into Clinton has been closed, the judge said there was ‘little remaining privacy interest in the release of documents identifying [Clinton] as the subject of this investigation.’

The request to unseal the documents was filed by E. Randol Schoenberg, a California-based attorney who recovers artwork stolen by the Nazis and helped inspire the film Woman in Gold.

He has said he was surprised by the FBI’s sudden decision to reopen the investigation – and Comey’s public announcement about it in a letter to congress a couple of weeks before the election – and wanted to find out more about the agency’s reasoning.

Clinton and her aides have repeatedly blamed Comey’s letter and the FBI for her loss to Trump in November.

Former President Bill Clinton has reportedly made similar claims, recently telling shoppers at his local bookstore that ‘James Comey cost her the election.’

Comey wrote an ‘update’ letter to members of congress in late October telling them that the FBI had renewed its investigation into Clinton after it found potentially relevant emails on Weiner’s laptop.

He said the FBI had obtained a warrant but it was not clear at that time what the emails contained or whether any of the information in them was new.

Many of the emails reportedly belonged to Huma Abedin, who had also used an email account on the candidate’s private server while working at the State Department.

Days before the election, amid strong backlash from Democrats, Comey announced that investigators had not uncovered anything significant to the probe in the new messages and that it would be closed.

But Clinton and many of her supporters said the overwhelming political damage had already been done by that point, and she was not able to recover before Election Day.



