Hillary Clinton’s 33,000 deleted emails may soon be released by Wikileaks, hints web mogul Kim Dotcom
INFAMOUS internet mogul Kim Dotcom claims there are still MORE Hillary Clinton emails to be published - piling more woes on the Democrat hopeful.
The Megaupload founder made his claim as speculation mounts Wikileaks could release Clinton's 33,000 'missing' emails.
"There's unpublished material, yet to come out. Clinton is in serious trouble," he tweeted.
The 42-year-old has previously hinted Wikileaks is in possession of the missing emails, which Clinton acknowledged erasing rather than turning over to the State Department.
She insists the emails were not work-related.
Dotcom last week tweeted directly at Wikileaks writing 'Oh no!' with a video of him reacting to audio saying: 'You've got mail.'
Earlier, he wrote he knew where the deleted emails are and how to get them legally, reports the MailOnline.
'I know where Hillary Clintons deleted emails are and how to get them legally' he wrote.
Dotcom - wanted in the US on copyright infringement and money-laundering charges - also included a step-by-step guide to how to access them.
'Access all emails Clinton sent or received in the last 7 years,' he wrote.
'They are all stored in the NSA spy cloud in Utah. Congress or Senate can request the emails from the NSA.'
However, newly released FBI notes suggest the emails still exist in several locations, including a Google server, according to the New York Post.
The entrepreneur, who has a long-standing relationship with Wikileaks and its founder Julian Assange, had said last year that Assange would be Clinton's worst nightmare because he 'has access to information.'
FBI agents are currently sifting through 650,000 emails found on a laptop taken from Anthony Weiner, the estranged husband of a close Clinton aide, Huma Abedin.
The FBI is reportedly targeting only email belonging to Abedin, who apparently had shared the laptop with her husband.
Abedin used other email accounts besides her state.gov account, including a Yahoo account and clintonemail.com, Clinton's private server, the according to those close to the investigation.
The latest poll on Tuesday showed Republican nominee Donald Trump edging ahead of Clinton for the first time since May.