CLINTONS STONEWALLED FOR MONTHS: Bombshell Epstein Deposition Footage Released After Contempt Threat Forces Compliance
The Clintons fought tooth and nail to avoid this moment—and now Americans can see exactly why.
After months of defiance, delay tactics, and outright refusal to cooperate, the House Oversight Committee Monday released hours of explosive sworn testimony from Bill and Hillary Clinton regarding their connections to convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. The depositions, conducted last week at the Chappaqua Performing Arts Center in New York, reveal a stunning pattern of convenient memory lapses and categorical denials that strain credulity.
The Denials Ring Hollow
Hillary Clinton made the extraordinary claim that she didn’t even know Jeffrey Epstein—a man whose social circle intersected with the highest echelons of Democrat power for decades. Meanwhile, Bill Clinton, who flight logs show traveled on Epstein’s private jet dozens of times, insisted he “saw nothing that ever gave me pause” and “did nothing wrong.”
These aren’t just convenient answers. They’re carefully crafted statements from two of the most seasoned political operators in American history.
Democrats Forced Their Hand
The real story here isn’t just what the Clintons said—it’s what they tried desperately to hide. When Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) issued subpoenas last August demanding their testimony, the Clintons didn’t just decline. They launched a full-scale political counterattack, accusing Comer of “trying to punish those who you see as your enemies” in a January letter dripping with the arrogance of the political elite.
That strategy backfired spectacularly.
When several Democrats broke ranks and voted to advance contempt of Congress proceedings against the power couple, the Clintons suddenly discovered a newfound respect for congressional authority. They caved. They had no choice.
The Oversight Committee Delivers
Chairman Comer’s decision to subpoena the Clintons alongside eight other individuals connected to the Epstein network represents exactly the kind of fearless oversight the American people demanded when they handed Republicans the House majority. No more special treatment for Democrat royalty. No more looking the other way while the politically connected escape scrutiny.
The full depositions are now available for every American to watch and judge for themselves. No media filter. No selective editing by sympathetic journalists. Just the raw testimony under oath.
Questions That Demand Answers
The Clintons’ testimony raises far more questions than it answers. How does someone claim complete ignorance of a man who repeatedly appears in the same social, political, and philanthropic circles? How does a former president explain away multiple flights on a convicted sex offender’s private aircraft while simultaneously claiming total ignorance of any wrongdoing?
The American people deserve better than convenient amnesia from public figures who still wield enormous influence within the Democrat Party.
Transparency Wins
Love him or hate him, Chairman Comer has done what previous oversight chairs failed to do: hold the powerful accountable regardless of their last name or political connections. By making these depositions public in their entirety, the Oversight Committee has demonstrated a commitment to transparency that stands in stark contrast to the Clintons’ months-long resistance.
This investigation continues. The evidence continues to mount. And the questions continue to multiply.
The Clintons may have thought their political stature would shield them from accountability. They were wrong. The days of Democrat elites operating by a different set of rules are over.
Americans can now watch the complete testimony and reach their own conclusions about whether the Clintons’ denials pass the credibility test. Something tells us the court of public opinion won’t be as lenient as the legal system has historically been to this particular power couple.
The truth has a way of emerging—even when the most powerful people in politics spend months trying to suppress it.





