QUEBEC CITY, Canada鈥擴S Secretary of State John Kerry refused to say Friday whether his predecessor Hillary Clinton鈥檚 use of a private server to send emails now deemed to have contained top secret information had threatened national security.
Asked about the controversy after the State Department confirmed seven Clinton email streams would not be made public because of their contents, Kerry said that was not a matter for his office.
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鈥淭he seven emails, or a few emails at any rate, are being withheld at the request of the intelligence community itself,鈥 he told reporters.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 speak to the specifics of anything with regard to the technicalities, the contents, what may or may not have taken place with respect to her personal server because that鈥檚 not our job. We don鈥檛 do that.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 know about it. It鈥檚 in other hands,鈥 he said, explaining that the State Department鈥檚 responsibility was to release the mails according to a Freedom of Information Act order and not to comment on their contents.
鈥淭hat is why it is happening at this moment. And that literally is all I am able to say about them鈥攏ot because I won鈥檛, but because we don鈥檛 have any of the other information. It鈥檚 not our information. We don鈥檛 make any judgments about it. That is in other hands.鈥
Kerry took over the State Department in February 2013 and his predecessor Clinton has gone on to become the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination in the 2016 race to the White House.
Clinton鈥檚 campaign has been dogged, however, by allegations that her use of a private email server, rather than a secure government system, while in office, had put US secrets at risk.
READ: US State: Dozens of old Clinton emails newly classified
On Friday, the State Department said emails had been removed from the latest batch to be released because they may contain top secret information鈥攁 decision that infuriated Clinton鈥檚 camp, which wants the mails to be released to prove her claim that they were anodyne.