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FBI probe of Clinton e-mails may be near end
Hillary Clinton campaigned at a union convention in Detroit Monday. (Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)
By Michael Biesecker
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — FBI agents looking into whether Hillary Clinton’s use of a private e-mail server imperiled government secrets appear to be close to completing their work, a process experts say will probably culminate in a sit-down with the former secretary of state.

The FBI has already spoken with Huma Abedin, a Clinton confidant who was among the Democratic presidential front runner’s closest aides at the State Department. Former chief of staff Cheryl D. Mills is also cooperating with the investigation, according to her lawyer.

That signals agents will probably seek to interview Clinton soon, if they haven’t already, former Justice Department officials said.

The FBI’s standard practice is to save questioning the person at the center of an investigation for last, once it has gathered available facts from others.

‘‘With a person like secretary Clinton, the FBI probably assumes they are going to get one chance to interview her, not only because she is a prominent person but because she is very busy right now with the presidential campaign,’’ said David Deitch, a former Justice Department prosecutor. ‘‘It makes sense they would defer interviewing her until late in their investigation.’’

On CBS’s ‘‘Face the Nation’’ on May 8, Clinton said the FBI had not yet reached out to her, but she was ‘‘more than ready to talk to anybody, anytime.’’

‘‘I hope that this is close to being wrapped up,’’ she said.

Clinton has good reasons to want the FBI to close its investigation soon. She has been dogged by questions about her e-mail practices for more than a year, since the Associated Press revealed that the clintonemail.com server was in the basement of Clinton’s New York home while she served as the nation’s top diplomat from 2009 to 2013.

Clinton has acknowledged in the campaign that her homebrew e-mail setup was a mistake but said she never sent or received anything marked classified at the time.

Clinton was campaigning in Michigan on Monday. She said Donald Trump’s economic policies would lead to lower wages, fewer jobs, and more debt, and she also warned unionized workers that the presumptive Republican presidential nominee could ‘‘bankrupt America like he’s bankrupted his companies.’’

‘‘Ask yourself, how can anybody lose money running a casino?’’ the likely Democratic nominee told thousands at the Service Employees International Union convention in Detroit.

At rally in East Los Angeles, Calif., on Monday, Clinton’s Democratic rival Bernie Sanders predicted he would win California’s June 7 primary, the nation’s largest with 475 delegates.

FBI Director James Comey said this month that he is keeping close tabs on the Clinton e-mail investigation to ensure it’s conducted properly and completed promptly. However, he added there is no timetable for completing the inquiry tied to events on the political calendar, such as the 2016 Democratic National Convention in July.