Hillary Clinton's campaign sees no need to turn over her email server despite criticism surrounding her communications practices during her tenure as secretary of state.

"We don't think we have to do it," campaign spokeswoman Jennifer Palmieri said on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," about suggestions to publish the entirety of messages on Clinton's private account, which she used for government business during her four years at the U.S. Department of State.

According to Palmieri, such a dramatic step was not necessary to establish the presidential candidate's trustworthiness. Commentator Brit Hume, though, told Fox News Sunday that the latest release of 3,000 Clinton emails was insufficient.

"Everything that we get has already been selected by Hillary Clinton not to be deleted, so even if we got everything that was left, we wouldn't get everything," Hume said. "This is so Clinton-esque. You never quite get the whole truth. You never quite get full disclosure. You never quite catch them in a violation of the law, but you almost never catch them being totally ethical, either."

Meanwhile, attorneys for Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, are trying to stall a Florida lawyer's effort to get a peek at messages stored on the power couple's private server, Politico recalled. Clintons' attorneys have asked a federal court to temporarily bar Larry Klayman from demanding information in connection with a racketeering lawsuit he filed in March against the Clintons and their foundation.

"To permit (Klayman) to obtain documents ... through civil 'discovery' in a meritless lawsuit against the former Secretary of State would set a dangerous precedent ripe for abuse," the legal team argued. "(He) has sued former Secretary Clinton or President Clinton at least fifteen times, (and) almost all of those lawsuits have failed before or at the motion-to-dismiss stage."

In his own 93-page complaint, though, Klayman insisted that the Clintons were running a "criminal enterprise" that involved accepting "bribes" in the form of donations to the Clinton Foundation.