Bill and Hillary Clinton to Appear in Jeffrey Epstein Depositions Later This Month, Comer Confirms
The Clintons agreed to filmed, transcribed depositions after months of subpoenas and threats of criminal contempt by House Republicans investigating Epstein's sex trafficking network.
- Late Tuesday, the Clintons finalized an agreement to testify before the House Oversight Committee on Feb. 26 and Feb. 27 to avoid contempt proceedings.
- After subpoenas issued in July 2025 and threats of a Feb. 4 contempt vote, House Republicans pressed the Clintons for compliance as negotiations intensified.
- Comer rejected the Clintons' proposal for a four-hour transcribed interview in New York, calling it `unreasonable`, and accepted filmed, transcribed depositions Monday night.
- The agreement prevented, for now, a House contempt vote and possible criminal referrals as the House Rules Committee suspended its planned contempt vote after the Clintons agreed to appear, pausing enforcement actions.
- Clinton spokesperson Angel Ureña said they look forward to setting a precedent that applies to everyone, as the U.S. Department of Justice released more than 3 million pages and Bill Clinton features frequently in the Oversight panel's months-deep investigation.
136 Articles
136 Articles
Bill and Hillary Clinton will testify at the end of February in the U.S. Congress about their ties to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, announced the committee investigating the case, that he had threatened the couple with legal action if he did not come to testify.
The former president and his wife, former secretary of state, who denounce political manoeuvres, finally agreed to be heard by a parliamentary committee on their possible links with the sexual predator, and they will be heard separately in February.
OMISSION: ABC, NBC Conceal Clintons’ Cave on Epstein Files Deposition
After much wrangling, the Clintons will stave off a Contempt of Congress referral by appearing for a closed-door deposition before the House Oversight Committee, to answer questions regarding their relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. Two of the three broadcast network nightly newscasts did not deem this to be sufficiently newsworthy to air. The sole network to cover the Clinton reversal was CBS. Here’s what coverage looked like on the Evening Ne…
Clintons to testify in Epstein congressional probe later this month, contempt vote on hold
By Ryan Patrick Jones and David Morgan WASHINGTON, Feb 3 (Reuters) – Former U.S. president Bill Clinton and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton will testify later this month in a congressional investigation into the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, Republican U.S. Representative James Comer said in a statement on Tuesday. Hillary Clinton will appear before the House Oversight Committee on February 26 and Bill Clinton will do …
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