Clinton White House records set to be released by US National Archive
The US National Archives is releasing a batch of documents that might shed light on painful chapters in Hillary Clinton's life as first lady, just as she ponders a bid for the White House in 2016.

The US National Archives is releasing a batch of documents that might shed light on painful chapters in Hillary Clinton's life as first lady, just as she ponders a bid for the White House in 2016.
The 10,000 pages of records from the Clinton administration were expected touch on the investigation into the Bill and Hillary Clinton's land dealings in Arkansas, known as the Whitewater investigation and his affair with intern Monica Lewinsky.
They might also cover the 1993 death of deputy White House counsel Vince Foster and the pardons Bill Clinton granted in his final hours as president.
With these documents the National Archives will have released about 30,000 pages of papers since February.
Both the Obama White House and the Clinton Presidential Library in Little Rock, Arkansas, have signed off on the release of the records.
Hillary's influence in the White House is also expected to be explored in the papers, from her role on Clinton's unsuccessful health care overhaul plan to her 2000 Senate campaign in New York.