The Federal Bureau of Investigation says it has studied newly discovered emailsin its investigation of U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.FBI Director James Comey said the new emailsdid not change the bureau's earlier decision.The FBI again decided that no charges should be broughtagainst Clinton for her use of a personal email serverwhile she was U.S. secretary of state.Comey sent a letter to members of Congress with his findingstwo days before the U.S. presidential election.The FBI launched an investigation in 2015into Clinton's use of a private email server. Investigators tried to find out if Clintonhad sent secret government information through the private server.The emails were written before she became the Democratic Party's candidate for president.In July, Comey announced the FBI investigationhad not found enough evidence to charge Clinton with a crime.But he did say the investigation foundshe had been "extremely careless" in her email practices.On October 28, Comey sent a letter to Congressstating that the FBI had found a new group of emailsthat could be important to the investigation.The emails were discovered in a separate investigationinvolving former Congressman Anthony Weiner,the husband of top Clinton advisor Huma Abedin.Comey was criticized by many Democrats and some Republicansfor the FBI's decision to make the email investigation public.The decision came as opinion studies showed the presidential racebecoming close in the days before the election.The critics argued that the decision could possibly change the minds of votersand influence the outcome of the election.Some also suggested Comey's action may have violated the U.S. Hatch Act,which sets limits on the political activities of federal employees.In his latest letter, Comey wrote that FBI investigatorshad reviewed a large number of newly discovered emails since October 28."Based on our review, we have not changed our conclusionsthat we expressed in July with respect to Hillary Clintonwhile she was secretary of state," he wrote.Historically, federal government agencieshave attempted not to get involved in politics during election campaigns.The Clinton campaign welcomed Comey's latest decision regarding the investigation."We were always confident nothing would cause the July decision to be revisited.Now Director Comey has confirmed it," campaign spokesman Brian Fallon said on Twitter.Trump reacted by saying Clinton is "being protected by a rigged system."He also questioned how the FBI could have examined all the emails,which reportedly numbered in the hundreds of thousands."You can't review 650,000 new emails in eight days.You can't do it, folks," Trump told supporters during a rally Sunday.