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More than half of the meetings that Hillary ClintonHillary Rodham ClintonComey to Congress: No regrets Overnight Cybersecurity: Comey testifies on Clinton probe, surveillance | Officials grilled over financial aid breach | Massive phishing attack hits Gmail users Budowsky: A fascist-friendly POTUS MORE reportedly took with people outside the government while serving as secretary of State were with Clinton Foundation donors, according to The Associated Press.
At least 85 of those 154 people, whom met or had phone conversations with Clinton, had donated to Clinton's family foundation, either directly or through companies or groups, according to news service's review published Tuesday.
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The 85 donors contributed $156 million to the charity, with at least 40 donating more than $100,000 each and 20 giving more than $1 million, according to the review.
The AP said that the meetings apparently didn't violate legal agreements that Clinton and former President Bill Clinton
Bill ClintonComey to Congress: No regrets Under Contract FBI director to Congress: No regrets MORE signed before she served in the Obama administration starting in 2009.
Officials from at least 16 foreign governments that donated upward of $170 million to the Clinton Foundation also met with Clinton, though the AP noted they presumably met on state business.
The foundation has faced a new round of scrutiny recently as Clinton leads Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump
Donald TrumpChrissy Teigen: ‘So tired’ of Trump admin. ‘I'm gonna have to go on another med’ Stephen Colbert reacts to online backlash over Trump jokes Overnight Healthcare: House to vote Thursday on ObamaCare repeal MORE in polls.
The Clinton Foundation announced last week that it would no longer accept foreign or corporate donations if Clinton becomes president, though Trump has called for the Clintons to shutter it immediately.
"It is now clear that the Clinton Foundation is the most corrupt enterprise in political history," Trump said Monday.
Bill Clinton defended the charity's work on Monday and announced that he would step down from the foundation he established in 1997 if his wife is elected in November. He also said the group would only accept money from U.S. citizens, permanent residents and U.S.-based independent foundations.