The former secretary of state spoke in response to requests from groups and companies including eBay Inc., the California Medical Association, Deutsche Bank AG and the Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries Inc. Her husband delivered paid speeches that were funded by Jefferies Group LLC, UBS Group AG and Apollo Management Holdings, among others. He took in $275,000 from the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies in Toronto in May 2014.

The money the Clintons earned in speaking fees since the start of 2014 is in addition to the $104.9 million Bill Clinton made from speeches from January 2001 to January 2013. The Clintons have not disclosed their earnings from 2013, Hillary Clinton’s first year after leaving the State Department.

The disclosure from Hillary Clinton’s final year at the State Department listed a mortgage on a personal residence, but didn’t specify whether it was for the Clintons’ home in Washington or in Chappaqua, New York. The new disclosure doesn't include that mortgage. Presidential candidates, unlike cabinet secretaries and senators, aren't required to report mortgages.

The couple has at times sounded tone deaf when discussing their wealth.

Hillary Clinton said during her book tour last summer that she and her husband “dead broke” when leaving the White House. Weeks later, she apologized for using an “inartful” term that was nonetheless “accurate” in describing their financial standing in early 2001. “We are so successful and we're so blessed by the success we've had. And my husband has worked incredibly hard,” she said in a July interview with Fusion.

Just last week, Bill Clinton defended his work on the paid speech circuit and his fundraising for the Clinton Foundation, telling NBC News: “I gotta pay our bills.”

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