Clintons ordered to testify on connections to Jeffrey Epstein in December
The House Oversight Committee demands in-person depositions from Bill and Hillary Clinton in December over their alleged ties to Jeffrey Epstein, with threats of contempt if they refuse.
- Next month, the GOP-led House Oversight Committee summoned former President Bill Clinton for a December 17 deposition and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for December 18.
- Evidence released by the House Oversight Committee includes letters allegedly signed by Bill Clinton, with Maxwell telling investigators she considers Clinton a friend and he 'absolutely never' went to Epstein's Island.
- The panel distinguished its treatment of witnesses by noting the House Oversight Committee allowed written testimony for some but requires the Clintons to testify in person after good-faith scheduling efforts.
- Comer warned that the House Oversight Committee remains in good-faith talks but will start contempt proceedings if the Clintons do not comply with subpoenas, he said on Nov. 21.
- The subpoenas follow broader disclosures and inquiries amid President Donald Trump signing the Epstein Files Transparency Act directing the U.S. Department of Justice to release information next month, while David Kendall said depositions would be unnecessary but the Clintons welcome oversight.
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Top GOP chair issues stark warning to Clintons if they defy depositions in Epstein investigation
House Oversight Committee Chairman Rep. James Comer warned both Bill and Hillary Clinton to comply with subpoenas for Jeffrey Epstein probe on Friday or they would be "in defiance."
House Oversight Committee widens its investigation into Jeffrey Epstein
CNN By Annie Grayer, MJ Lee, CNN (CNN) — The House Oversight Committee is expanding its investigation into convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and searching for new targets — guaranteeing that the Epstein controversy is unlikely to die down even after the Justice Department was compelled by Congress to release the files that it has in its possession. This week, the investigative panel run by Republican Rep. James Comer issued subpoenas …
House Oversight Committee widens its investigation into Jeffrey Epstein
By Annie Grayer, MJ Lee, CNN (CNN) — The House Oversight Committee is expanding its investigation into convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and searching for new targets — guaranteeing that the Epstein controversy is unlikely to die down even after the Justice Department was compelled by Congress to release the files that it has in its possession. This week, the investigative panel run by Republican Rep. James Comer issued subpoenas to t…
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