I don’t agree with your reasoning. “Pertinent to an investigation” doesn’t mean they contain evidence indicative of one thing or another.
It means they have been reviewed. Otherwise how can he say they are pertinent?
I wouldn’t find it unusual for my wife to have sent or received emails on my computer at all.
This is more than: “Wife has emails on husbands computer”, THEREFORE it is pertinent.
Not very likely, Fido
"she asked me a lot of very pertinent questions" synonyms: relevant, to the point, apposite, appropriate, suitable, fitting, fit, apt, applicable, material, germane, to the purpose, apropos;
So, Yeah, it does.
Give it a rest, Goofy.
It also does not rule out that DO CONTAIN EVIDENCE pertinent to the finding of criminality, which is obvious to everyone BUT the FBI and our legal system, which as observed long ago, the Law?
THE LAW (often) IS A ASS!"
“Pertinent to an investigation
Incorrect. It’s “Pertinent to THE investigation”.
This means it IS pertinent to the now re-opened investigation on Hillary. And there is no way in hell Comey would have set the world on fire without having a grasp of what’s in these emails.