The people who themselves might not have had clearance to even look at some of the emails, Cheryl Mills (Hillary’s fixer, also an attorney) and Heather Samuelson (a former Senior Advisor to Hillary at State, Assistant Counsel at White House and now one of Hillary’s personal attorneys) were tasked to separate the work emails from the ‘non-work’ emails. They allegedly did that based on who the emails were sent to or from who they came in, not based upon what the actual content was.

So when the FBI heard this, they naturally asked for a list of those names used to distinguish so they could more easily search the file.

The aides or attorneys asked ‘asserted privilege’ and refused to turn the information over to the FBI.

Now they might legally be able to claim ‘work product’, i.e. information prepared in anticipation of litigation.

But this certainly sounds like Hillary trying to cover things up again. Why hide the list of who you are evaluating the emails by?

Especially, if, as Hillary claimed, she was so anxious to be helpful and turn everything over?

HT: Watchful One, Render 64