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Blackberry-toting Clinton is now an action figure

A Connecticut-based company is selling a miniature, plastic version of Hillary Clinton and poking fun at her email controversy.
Former US Secretary of State and US Senator Hillary Clinton speaks at the 2015 Meeting of Clinton Global Initiative University at University of Miami on March 7, 2015 in Miami, Fl. (Photo by Rodrigo Varela/Getty)
Former US Secretary of State and US Senator Hillary Clinton speaks at the 2015 Meeting of Clinton Global Initiative University at University of Miami on March 7, 2015 in Miami, Fl.

Hillary Clinton and her email controversy have been immortalized in plastic.

A Connecticut-based company is selling a miniature, action-figure version of Clinton, who dominated headlines last week as she faced accusations for using her personal email address during her tenure as secretary of state.

REPORT: Hillary Clinton used private email at State Department

Herobuilders is known for manufacturing dolls based on current news and events. The Blackberry-toting Clinton is the latest creation, available starting Monday on the company's website for $39.95.

Clinton addressed the recent criticism last week by calling on the State Department to release 55,000 pages of emails that she had selected to be turned over to the government. The ongoing investigation will determine whether or not Clinton broke rules in using her personal account.

“I want the public to see my email. I asked State to release them. They said they will review them for release as soon as possible,” she posted to Twitter.

Aside from the criticism over the emails, her family's foundation -- the Clinton Global Initiative -- is facing scrutiny for accepting contributions from foreign governments during the same period.

The presumed Democratic front-runner has yet to share her presidential plans for 2016.

Herobuilders, based in Oxford, Connecticut, produced former President George W. Bush as its first action figure in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The company also has created dolls representing Kaci Hickox, the Maine nurse who treated Ebola patients, and Rob Ford, the former Toronto mayor who was catapulted into international infamy after videos surfaced of him smoking crack cocaine and saying racist and homophobic slurs.