House Oversight Committee subpoenas Clintons and other former top officials over Epstein links
- The House Oversight Committee subpoenaed high-profile figures – including Bill and Hillary Clinton, alongside former DOJ/FBI leaders (Loretta Lynch, Merrick Garland, Eric Holder, James Comey, etc.) – as part of its Jeffrey Epstein investigation. Depositions are scheduled from August to October 2025.
- The probe examines why Epstein’s associates evaded accountability for years, highlighting systemic lapses in handling the case. Questions will address potential misconduct or cover-ups involving elite figures tied to Epstein’s crimes.
- The subpoenas follow the DOJ’s recent closure of its Epstein review that dismissed claims of a “client list” implicating powerful individuals, fueling accusations of a cover-up. Epstein’s 2019 jail death (ruled a suicide) remains under scrutiny.
- Fewer than five former U.S. presidents have faced congressional subpoenas, underscoring the probe’s rarity. Bill Clinton’s documented ties to Epstein (e.g., 26 flights on Epstein’s jet) add gravity, though he denied awareness of Epstein’s crimes.
- While critics warn of political theater, bipartisan elements exist, including a Democratic-backed motion to secure DOJ records while protecting victims. The outcome hinges on whether testimonies reveal suppressed evidence or are thwarted by legal maneuvering.
The House Oversight Committee (HOC) has issued subpoenas for several government officials, including former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, as part of its investigation into the late financier Jeffrey Epstein.
The HOC announced the summons for the Clintons and others in a statement Tuesday, Aug. 5. High-ranking officials of the Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) were also named in the list of individuals subpoenaed by the committee.
These include former U.S. Attorneys General Loretta Lynch, Merrick Garland, Eric Holder, Jeff Sessions and Bill Barr. Former FBI Directors James Comey and Robert Mueller are also expected to testify. The former first lady is expected to testify on Oct. 9, while the 42nd chief executive will testify on Oct. 14.
The depositions set to begin on Aug. 18 and continue through mid-October mark a dramatic escalation in a scandal that has simmered for decades. The subpoenaed officials will face questions on why Epstein’s associates escaped accountability for years, underscoring systemic failures on the government’s handling of the case.
The subpoenas also come just weeks after the DOJ closed its Epstein review, which denied the existence of a “client list implicating powerful figures. This has fueled accusations of a systemic cover-up protecting elite figures tied to Epstein’s crimes.
Moreover, the summons reignite scrutiny that abruptly ended when Epstein died in jail in August 2019 –which was officially ruled a suicide. They signal Republican lawmakers’ refusal to accept that assertion at face value.
“The committee must conduct oversight of the federal government’s enforcement of sex trafficking laws … and specifically its handling of the investigation and prosecution of Epstein,” HOC Chairman James Comer (R-KY) wrote in letters accompanying the subpoenas.
New subpoenas threaten elite secrets, but will Epstein’s network finally be exposed?
The investigation revisits long-standing tensions around the convicted sex offender’s connections to political, financial and media luminaries. Flight logs previously revealed Bill traveled on Epstein’s Lolita Express private jet at least 26 times. The former president’s office acknowledged the logs in 2019, but denying any knowledge of Epstein’s crimes. (Related: “President Clinton is a key person”: Epstein files finally unsealed.)
Historical context amplifies the gravity of the probe. Fewer than five former U.S. presidents have ever faced congressional subpoenas, and none since Congress sought current President Donald Trump’s testimony related to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot – a subpoena later abandoned.
The Epstein case, meanwhile, spans two administrations. Florida authorities first investigated Epstein in the early 2000s, culminating in a widely criticized 2007 plea deal shielding him from federal charges. The financier was later arrested in 2019 arrest under Trump’s DOJ, leading to his demise in August of that year.
Critics argue the probe risks political theater. Last month, the Wall Street Journal reported in 2023 that Trump penned a jovial note in Epstein’s 2003 birthday album. The real estate mogul sued for defamation over the story.
Yet bipartisan support exists; the subpoenas include a Democratic-backed motion to compel DOJ records while protecting victims’ identities. As depositions loom, unanswered questions linger. Will testimony expose suppressed evidence, or will legal maneuvering and privilege claims bury the truth?
Clinton.news has more similar stories.
Watch Texas gubernatorial candidate “Doc” Pete Chambers lamenting the lack of progress on the Epstein files in this clip.
This video is from the Brighteon Highlights channel on Brighteon.com.
More related stories:
FBI reportedly ignored mountains of evidence against pedophile Jeffrey Epstein including allegation Bill Clinton was with “2 young girls” on island.
Vanity Fair published a hit piece on Epstein files just hours before Clinton ‘threat’ revelation.
Court unseals documents: Bill Clinton alleged to have appeared on Epstein’s Island.
Sources include:
RT.com
Oversight.House.gov
BBC.com
Brighteon.com
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