Clintons to appear for high-profile depositions in Epstein probe
After months of subpoenas and delays, the Clintons face closed-door depositions as part of a House probe into their ties to Epstein and Maxwell, with a contempt vote looming.
- 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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485 Articles
President Bill Clinton's testimony about Epstein ties concludes after more than 6 hours
Former President Bill Clinton finished his testimony before members of Congress for their investigation over convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The closed-door deposition ended after more than six hours of questioning from lawmakers about his connections to the disgraced financier.
Bill Clinton's Epstein hearing proves 1 thing—Trump must testify too
On Friday, it was former President Bill Clinton’s turn to be hauled in front of the House Committee to Protect Donald Tru— oh, sorry, it’s the House Oversight Committee. You can see why one would get confused. After all, how is it that someone who left...
Bill Clinton's Testimony to the Oversight Committee
In Bill Clinton’s opening statement during today’s hearing with the Oversight Committee investigating the Jeffrey Epstein case, he claimed he knew nothing about Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes. If he is guilty of perverse behavior, we will likely never know for certain. The committee said he was forthcoming and answered all their questions. Clinton said he and […] The post Bill Clinton’s Testimony to the Oversight Committee appeared first on www.indepe…
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