Hillary Clinton deposed at home in closed-door Epstein probe

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Hillary Clinton deposed at home in closed-door Epstein probe

Hillary Clinton is scheduled to testify Thursday in a closed-door deposition before the House Oversight Committee. Former President Bill Clinton will appear Friday.

The sessions will take place in Chappaqua, New York, near the Clintons’ home, after months of negotiations between their attorneys and committee leaders. Lawmakers voted last July to subpoena both as part of Congress’s investigation into Jeffrey Epstein and his longtime associate, Ghislaine Maxwell.

The former president and former secretary of state will now answer questions under oath in a congressional probe that has drawn support from both parties. Democrats joined Republicans in compelling their testimony, a break from the partisan splits that often define Oversight fights.

Months of resistance end in agreement

The Clintons declined to appear for in-person questioning for months, arguing they had already provided sworn statements and relevant records. They also challenged the subpoenas as untethered to a valid legislative purpose.

In January, the Oversight panel voted to hold both in contempt of Congress. Had the full House approved the measure, it would have triggered a criminal referral to the Justice Department. Shortly after the committee advanced those resolutions, the Clintons agreed to sit for depositions under terms negotiated with Chairman James Comer, R-Ky.

As Straight Arrow News has reported, the Clintons pushed to testify publicly. Republicans refused and insisted on closed-door sessions.

Comer said the committee will release video and transcripts once the Clintons sign off.

“We’ll publish the video and transcripts of the Clinton depositions just as quickly as the Clintons approve it, and go from there,” Comer told reporters.

AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez

Focus on Epstein ties and federal handling

Lawmakers from both parties say they want answers about Epstein’s access to powerful figures, how he and Maxwell cultivated relationships, and how federal investigations were handled.

Bill Clinton flew on Epstein’s private plane multiple times in the early 2000s and appears in photographs contained in files recently released by the Justice Department. He has not been accused by law enforcement of wrongdoing tied to Epstein. A spokesperson has said he ended contact before Epstein’s 2019 arrest and was unaware of criminal activity.

Hillary Clinton has said she does not recall ever speaking to Epstein and has stated she met Maxwell only a handful of times.

The US Justice Department / Handout /Anadolu via Getty Images)

Some Democrats argue Republicans are using the inquiry to target longtime political adversaries.

“What the Epstein survivors have been asking for is both transparency and accountability. And what Republicans want to do is turn this into political theater,” Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández, D-N.M., told reporters Wednesday.

Other Democrats have said cooperation with lawful subpoenas should apply to anyone connected to Epstein, regardless of party.

The committee has indicated it will question additional current and former officials. The Clintons’ testimony this week will add sworn accounts of their interactions with Epstein and their knowledge of his activities.

Ella Rae Greene, Editor In Chief

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