On Monday July 4, WikiLeaks published over 1,200 emails about the Iraq War from the private server that Hillary Clinton used during her time as Secretary of State.

The website also tweeted a link to 1,258 of Clinton’s emails.

#Chilcot refers to a report that will be released on Wednesday regarding Britain’s role in the Iraq war.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said in June that the website had gathered “enough evidence” for the FBI to indict Clinton. He added, though, in an interview:

‘We could proceed to an indictment, but if Loretta Lynch is the head of the [Department of Justice] in the United States, she’s not going to indict Hillary Clinton. That’s not possible that could happen.’

This release of Clinton’s emails is not the first time Assange has gone after the former Secretary of State and current presumptive Democratic nominee.

Assange also attacked Google in June, criticizing them of “directly [engaging]” in Clinton’s campaign.

He claimed that Google chairman Eric Schmidt had “set up a company to run the digital component of Hillary Clinton’s campaign.”

The claim about Eric Schmidt creating a company for the Clinton campaign is factual. The company is called The Groundwork. However, it is not clear whether Google is directly involved in Schmidt’s creation of the company.

Assange also found in Clinton’s previously-released email transcripts frequent emails from Jared Cohen, founder of “Google Ideas.” These findings led him to imply that a Clinton presidency would be beneficial to Google and its employees:

‘We should understand that Google… is intensely aligned with U.S. exceptionalism… personally at the top aligned with Hillary Clinton’s election campaign and almost certainly once Hillary Clinton becomes president, those people in Google, like Jared Cohen, will be placed into positions around the new Clinton presidency.’

Assange has made it clear that he has several leaks of Clinton’s emails planned. He has also made it incredibly clear that he is against a Clinton presidency. In a video uploaded to YouTube in December 2015, he said:

‘Of course, when she is in power…she is a problem for freedom of speech. We know what she is going to do. She made the chart for the destruction of Libya—she was involved in the process of taking the Libyan armory and sending it to Syria.’

Watch Assange’s video below:

Tens of thousands of Clinton’s emails have already been released to the public. On March 16, 2016, WikiLeaks launched 30,322 of Clinton’s emails.

Thus far, Clinton has managed to stay ahead in the polls, even in the face of attacks about her emails and an investigation by the House Select Committee on Benghazi that recently came to a close. That is not to say that Clinton is not seen as having a trustworthiness problem, though.

In June, The Washington Post reports, an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll revealed that “69 percent of respondents said they were concerned that Clinton has a record or reputation as untrustworthy.”

Clinton recently spoke about the lack of trust people have in her.

‘I take this seriously, as someone who is asking for your votes, and I personally know I have work to do on this point. A lot of people tell pollsters they don’t trust me. I don’t like hearing that, and I’ve thought a lot about what’s behind it.’ ‘You know, you hear 25 years worth of wild accusations, anyone could start to wonder. Political opponents and conspiracy theorists have accused me of every crime in the book. None of it’s true, never has been.’ ‘And it certainly is true that I’ve made mistakes. I don’t know anyone who hasn’t. So I understand that people have questions.’

Featured image via Wikimedia, available under a Creative Commons license.