New York, Feb 27 (.) Former US President Bill Clinton is set to appear before the House Oversight Committee in New York on Friday as part of its ongoing investigation into the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, marking the first time a former president has been compelled to testify to Congress under subpoena, reports CBS News.
The closed-door deposition is a victory for Rep. James Comer of Kentucky, the Republican chairman of the House Oversight Committee, who won the months-long battle against the former president and his wife, former First Lady and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who had vowed to fight the effort.
However, the couple ultimately relented post a bipartisan vote cast in the committee to recommend holding both the ex-US officials in criminal contempt of Congress for refusing to testify.
Bill Clinton’s appearance comes just a day after Hillary Clinton had spent hours with the committee. According to Republicans, the ex-First Lady repeatedly said that she had little knowledge of the questions being asked of her, saying that she had little association with Epstein, and they should instead be directed toward her husband.
“The number of times that she said, ‘I don’t know. You’ll have to ask my husband,’ was more than a dozen,” Comer said.
Bill Clinton has appeared in numerous photos with the deceased financier and sex offender in the recent tranche of the Epstein files released, and was noted to have taken handful of trips with him decades ago, though has not been accused of any wrongdoing.
In a sworn declaration submitted to the committee last month, the former president said that Epstein offered his private plane to him, his staff and his Secret Service detail in support of the Clinton Foundation’s philanthropic work between 2002 and 2003.
He also denied ever visiting Epstein’s private island in the Virgin Islands, where a number of the late financier’s alleged crimes occurred, and maintained that he had not been in contact with Epstein for more than a decade before his 2019 arrest.
“While Epstein may very well have attended any of the many hundreds of White House events or receptions during my eight years in office and been photographed with me as were tens of thousands of individuals, I do not recall encountering Epstein, or any specific interactions with him, while in office,” Bill Clinton said in the declaration.
Bill Clinton further said that he did not recall when he first met the convicted sex offender’s associate Ghislaine Maxwell or his interactions with her, stating that she later was in a relationship with a mutual friend.
“To be clear, I had no idea of Mr. Epstein’s or Ms. Maxwell’s criminal activities,” the declaration said. “And, irrespective of any intent either may have ever had, I did not take any action for the purpose of helping them to avoid any type of scrutiny.”
In her deposition Thursday, Hillary Clinton likewise reiterated her original statement, saying that she had no knowledge of Epstein or Maxwell’s crimes.
When asked by reporters after the deposition whether she was confident her husband also had no knowledge of Epstein’s crimes, Hillary Clinton responded, “I am.”
“The chronology of the connection that he had with Epstein ended years, several years before anything about Epstein’s criminal activities came to light,” she said.
Rep. Robert Garcia of California, the top Democrat on the panel, said Thursday afternoon as the deposition was ongoing that Hillary Clinton was “answering all the questions.” Republicans also said after the day ended that she answered everyone’s questions.
Ahead of Bill Clinton’s testimony, Garcia said the committee had “now set a new precedent about talking to presidents and former presidents.” He demanded that President Trump be “immediately” asked to appear before the committee to testify about his own connections with Epstein.
Trump has been the prime target of all opponents ever since the Epstein files were released, as his name has appeared thousands of times in the documents released by the Justice Department. However, the POTUS denied any wrongdoing.
But Comer said that Trump has already answered questions from the press about his relationship with Epstein.
“President Trump has answered hundreds, if not thousands of questions from you all about Epstein, and I think he’s been very transparent in releasing the documents,” Comer told reporters Thursday.
The president’s answers to the press are not under oath, as Trump, who called the effort to release the Epstein files a “hoax,” eventually supported their release after Democrats and a few Republicans forced a vote on compelling the Justice Department to make them public.
Former presidents in the US have so far never been successfully compelled to testify before Congress in the past. As such, while several have voluntarily answered questions from committees, including Presidents Gerald Ford in 1983, Harry Truman in 1955 and William Howard Taft a dozen times, none have been compelled as such to testify, with the hearings setting a new legal precedent. . . KK
Bill Clinton to appear before House Oversight Committee in New York amid ongoing investigation into Jeffrey Epstein
New York, Feb 27 (.) Former US President Bill Clinton is set to appear before the House Oversight Committee in New York on Friday as part of its ongoing investigation into the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, marking the first time a former president has been compelled to testify to Congress under
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