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Home»International News»Inside the Clintons’ fight to avoid testifying in the US Congress over Epstein
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Inside the Clintons’ fight to avoid testifying in the US Congress over Epstein

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auDecember 15, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
Inside the Clintons’ fight to avoid testifying in the US Congress over Epstein
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Comer, in response, has only amped up his threats to penalise the Clintons if they fail to show up in person.

“The former president and former secretary of state have delayed, obstructed and largely ignored the committee staff’s efforts to schedule their testimony,” Comer said in a statement on Friday night. He again threatened to start contempt proceedings against them if they did not appear before his committee on December 17 and 18, or schedule a date in early January to do so.

Former US president Bill Clinton and former secretary of state Hillary Clinton.

Former US president Bill Clinton and former secretary of state Hillary Clinton.Credit: NYT

In a letter last week, Kendall accused Comer of going after the Clintons with “weaponised legislative investigations and targeted criminal prosecutions”, and said that it was neither appropriate nor tenable for them to appear and be held to a different standard than others who had been excused.

“President Trump has consistently sought to divert attention from his own relationship with Mr Epstein and unfortunately the committee appears to be complicit,” Kendall wrote in the letter, one of three that were provided to The New York Times by a Democratic lawmaker and have not been previously disclosed. He said that Comer’s only reason for targeting the Clintons was “to catalyse a public spectacle for partisan purposes”.

Bill Clinton was acquainted with Epstein – an association the former US president described in his memoir – but never visited his private island and cut off contact with him two decades ago. He took four international trips on Epstein’s private jet in 2002 and 2003, according to flight logs, and an undated photograph of Clinton and Epstein signed by the former president was part of a batch of images released by House Democrats last week highlighting Epstein’s ties to powerful men.

“Given what came to light much after,” Kendall wrote to Comer in one of his letters, “he has expressed regret for even that limited association.”

Angel Urena, a spokesperson for Clinton, said that “for months, we’ve been offering the same exact thing he accepted from the rest, but he refuses and won’t explain why.”

He added, “Make of that what you will.”

Criminal contempt charges carry a maximum sentence of one year in prison, as well as a fine of up to $US100,000 ($150,500). Not every witness who defies a congressional subpoena is referred for contempt. Jim Jordan, the chair of the judiciary panel, for instance, was among the Republican members of Congress who received a subpoena but did not co-operate with the committee investigating the January 6, 2021, mob attack on the Capitol. He was not held in contempt.

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For Bill Clinton to appear on Capitol Hill to testify in the Epstein case would be nearly unprecedented. No former president has appeared before Congress since 1983, when Gerald Ford did so to discuss the celebration of the 1987 bicentennial of the enactment of the Constitution. When Trump was subpoenaed by the January 6 select committee in 2022, while he was out of office, he sued the panel to try to block it. The panel ultimately withdrew the subpoena.

In an October 6 letter, Kendall wrote to Comer that the Clintons should be treated the same way as the five former attorneys-general who were excused from his subpoenas because they said they had no information pertaining to the investigation.

“We submit that the Clintons likewise do not have knowledge relevant to the committee’s investigation,” Kendall wrote in that letter.

Kendall added, “There is simply no reasonable justification for compelling a former president and secretary of state to appear personally, given that their time and roles in government had no connection to the matter at hand.”

The request for information from Hillary Clinton, the former secretary of state and Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign rival, appeared to be the more perplexing of the two. Hillary Clinton had “no personal knowledge of Epstein or Maxwell’s criminal activities, never flew on his aircraft, never visited his island and cannot recall ever speaking to Epstein”, Kendall wrote.

James Comer has threatened to penalise the Clintons if they fail to show up in person.

James Comer has threatened to penalise the Clintons if they fail to show up in person.Credit: Bloomberg

Her connection to Maxwell, he said, involved “limited contact” during a time when Maxwell was in a relationship with a mutual friend.

Comer’s subpoena cited a nephew of Maxwell’s who had previously worked for Hillary Clinton during her 2008 presidential campaign and then at the State Department. But Kendall asserted that Hillary Clinton never knew that the employee, Alexander Djerassi, was related to Maxwell.

Nick Merrill, a spokesperson for Hillary Clinton, said that “since this started, we’ve been asking what the hell Hillary Clinton has to do with this, and he hasn’t been able to come up with an answer”.

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In a follow-up letter he sent on November 3, Kendall wrote that “subpoenaing former secretary Clinton is on its face both purposeless and harassing”.

When he met with Comer’s staff to discuss the subpoena in person, he added, no reason was given for wanting to question Hillary Clinton “beyond wanting to ask if she had ever spoken with her husband about this matter”. (Any conversations the two of them might have had, he noted as an aside, would be protected by marital privilege.)

Kendall said that the focus on the Clintons as “fact witnesses” when others had been allowed decline to testify raised questions about the neutrality of what was supposed to be a non-partisan committee.

“To date,” Kendall wrote in his November 3 letter, “the committee has elected to forgo deposing seven of the eight individuals, all of whom are not named Clinton.”

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The only former official who was subpoenaed and testified live was Barr, who served as attorney-general when Epstein was investigated, indicted and died by suicide while in federal custody.

Kendall’s most recent letter was sent on December 10. His tone and language had become more aggressive.

“We urge you to acknowledge that we are asking for nothing more than the same basic fairness offered to the attorneys-general who ran the DOJ while the Epstein investigations were being conducted,” Kendall wrote. “We remain ready, as we have been for months, to provide sworn statements to satisfy the committee’s oversight efforts.”

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