Bill Clinton says he “saw nothing and did nothing wrong” in Epstein testimony
Bill Clinton testified under subpoena about his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, denying knowledge of crimes despite being linked in photos and flying Epstein's plane 27 times, committee said.
- Former President Bill Clinton opened his deposition on Friday, February 27, 2026, telling the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, 'I saw nothing, and I did nothing wrong'.
- After DOJ disclosures, the committee moved to compel testimony as the Republican-led House Oversight Committee launched the probe and the Clintons agreed to testify after subpoenas and contempt threats, with former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton testifying on Thursday, February 26, 2026, denying memory of Epstein.
- Clinton acknowledged flying on Epstein’s private plane several times while traveling for Clinton Foundation work during the 2001–2003 period, and U.S. Department of Justice files include photos of him reclining in a hot tub with Ghislaine Maxwell .
- Committee Republicans said they still have many questions and may call witnesses including Howard Lutnick, while Rep. Robert Garcia demanded equal scrutiny for President Donald Trump and others.
- It is the first compelled congressional deposition of a former U.S. president, prompting debate over closed‑door depositions and potential transcript release, while Rep. James Comer says the inquiry targets accountability and influence.
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383 Articles
Bill Clinton, under oath, says had no knowledge of Epstein sex crimes
Former US president Bill Clinton said in sworn testimony released on Monday by a US congressional committee that he had no knowledge of the sex crimes of the late financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Former President Bill Clinton deposed in Epstein probe in potential first for Congress | Fox Wilmington WSFX-TV
close Video Rep Comer says Bill Clinton denied wrongdoing under oath to every question House Oversight Committee chair Rep. James Comer discusses what he le ...
WA Rep. Emily Randall among members of Congress questioning Bill Clinton about Jeffrey Epstein
Former President Bill Clinton finished his testimony before members of Congress — including Washington’s Emily Randall — for their investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
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