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FBI 'reopens investigation into Clintons at Trump lawyer's request'

The meeting took place at an airport in Arizona in May 2016: ABC News
The meeting took place at an airport in Arizona in May 2016: ABC News

The FBI has reportedly reopened an investigation into a meeting between Bill Clinton and former Attorney General Loretta Lynch - a runway tarmac encounter during the election campaign that Donald Trump claimed was an attempt to influence a probe into his rival's use of a private email server.

The American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) made a request for the FBI to reopen its consideration of their push for documents relating to the meeting. The chief counsel for the ACLJ is Jay Sekulow, one of the people on Donald Trump's legal team.

Mr Sekulow said the FBI sent him a letter saying it had reopened his Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for documents related to the June 2016 meeting. A batch of emails was eventually released after the initial request.

“While we appreciate that the FBI has ‘reopened’ the case file and is now ‘searching’ for documents responsive to our duly submitted FOIA request from more than a year ago, it stretches the bounds of credulity to suggest that the FBI bureaucracy just discovered that ‘potentially responsive’ records ‘may exist’ on its own accord,” Mr Sekulow said.