Hillary Clinton just held a testy press conference where she dismissed a question about Bill and North Korea

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Hillary Clinton takes questions from Fox News' Ed Henry.

Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton held a Friday-afternoon press conference where she addressed the latest story questioning her US State Department record.

She didn't appear to enjoy the entire experience.

When Fox News' Ed Henry asked Clinton multiple questions, for example, she told him he was only "entitled" to one.

"Well, let me answer one of your questions because I think that is what you are entitled to," she said, speaking in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where the national Democratic Party held a gathering.

Among other things, Henry asked about a story ABC News' Jonathan Karl published earlier that day that reported her husband, former President Bill Clinton, made some eyebrow-raising requests for information from her top aides while she was secretary of state in 2012.

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Bill Clinton's team asked if the US State Department would approve a $650,000 paid speaking engagement for the Democratic Republic of the Congo, whose problematic leader, Joseph Kabila, was labeled a "dictator" by Karl.

Bill Clinton wanted to know what the State Department thought if he donated all the money to the Clinton family's foundation.

Additionally, there was a request "related to" North Korea, whose government in Pyongyang is a fierce adversary of the US. ABC further reported that the invitation was somehow connected to Tony Rodham, Hillary Clinton's brother, who occasionally stumbles into controversies linked to his relatives' government work.

But Clinton stressed to Henry Friday that the State Department had a process to review all requests, no matter how "unusual."

"The process that was set up in my years as secretary of state was for any request that my husband received to be sent to the State Department to be vetted. So it didn't matter where it was coming from, it was going to go to the State Department. And there were some unusual requests, but they all went through the process," she said.

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AP Photo/Jim Mone

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton addresses the summer meeting of the Democratic National Committee.

Clinton also suggested there may have been a noble purpose behind the North Korea request and pointed to her husband's 2009 work to free two American journalists imprisoned in the country.

"Ed, I will say this," she told Henry. "You might not recall, but President Obama sent my husband to North Korea to rescue the two journalists that had been captured. This was after a painstaking negotiation to try and convince the North Korean leader to release these two young women."

Hillary Clinton said North Korea rebuffed every US request to free the two journalists, Euna Lee and Laura Ling. When Pyongyang finally suggested Bill Clinton come broker their release, she said, the US government was finally able to bring them back.

"I tell you that because that was a successful mission that accomplished its purpose," Hillary Clinton added. "Now, I think it's beyond unlikely that the State Department ... would say, 'You know, we think it's a good idea for you to go back and see what more you can find out, see what more you can pick up.'"

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She noted that Bill Clinton did not ultimately accept either of the two invitations and then ended the press conference without taking further questions.

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AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

Former Vice President Al Gore (center) hugs Laura Ling as Gore and Ling are joined by former President Bill Clinton (left) and Euna Lee (right).

After the event, Republican operatives widely shared video of her telling Henry that he was only "entitled" to the single question.

"Wow, that turned ugly fast," said Jeff Bechdel, a communications director for the research firm America Rising.

The GOP group further wrote: "In what was another brutal press conference, Hillary Clinton decided to dodge questions, blame government processes, and ignore tough questions."

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Watch video of the exchange below:

Hillary Clinton was also grilled about the ongoing email controversy dogging her campaign. She exclusively used a private email account for her work at the State Department, and critics have been pressing her on whether any secret information was potentially left vulnerable on her personal server.

The former secretary of state insisted again that she didn't send or receive any information that was marked classified at the time, even though some messages have been retroactively classified.

"It is complicated," she said. "It's a little confusing - and I certainly understand why - for the press and for the public to try and make sense of this. Like something wasn't classified in 2009, 2010, but maybe now it should [be]. But if you've been around the process you know that's not uncommon."

Watch below:

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