Clintons to appear for high-profile depositions in Epstein probe
The Republican-led House Oversight Committee subpoenas Bill and Hillary Clinton for closed-door depositions about their ties to Jeffrey Epstein amid ongoing investigations.
- At Chappaqua, Hillary Clinton will appear on Thursday, Feb. 26, and Bill Clinton on Friday, Feb. 27, for depositions that will be transcribed and filmed, the House Oversight Committee said.
- After months of delays and legal back-and-forth, the House Oversight Committee subpoenaed the Clintons and threatened contempt, prompting them to agree to in-person depositions despite earlier postponements.
- Records show Hillary Clinton's name appears more than 700 times, and DOJ files include flight logs and photos of Bill Clinton on Epstein's plane in 2002–2003.
- Tipp warned residents to allow travel time and follow law enforcement, while Comer said `We look forward to questioning the Clintons` during the investigation, despite opposition from Democrats.
- For the battle-hardened couple, this is another Washington brawl rooted in past crises as some Democrats joined Republicans on the contempt vote, while depositions for Richard Kahn and Darren Indyke moved to March 11 and March 19.
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The former chief of American diplomacy is scheduled to testify this Thursday before a parliamentary committee. His husband is due to be heard on Friday. At stake: the links between the former president and sexual criminal Jeffrey Epstein. - Epstein case: why are Bill and Hillary Clinton going to be heard? (International).
Epstein probe: Bill and Hillary Clinton to testify in Congress
Former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton is to testify behind closed doors Thursday (February 26) before a congressional committee investigating the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell. Former president Bill Clinton is scheduled to answer questions on Friday from the Republican-led House Oversight Committee.
The scandal, which continues to shake Europe, is carefully stifled by the White House, which only shows what makes it easier and embarrasses its opponents, as evidenced by the Clinton couple's hearings in Congress scheduled for Thursday 26 and Friday 27 February.
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