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Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) announced the full subpoena lineup back in August, posting the details publicly on X. His list was blunt, specific, and impossible for anyone to ignore:
“Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton: October 9
Former President Bill Clinton: October 14
Former U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland: October 2
Former FBI Director James Comey: October 7
Former U.S. Attorney General William Barr: August 18
Former U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales: August 26
Former U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions: August 28
Former FBI Director Robert Mueller: September 2
Former U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch: September 9
Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder: September 30”
The inclusion of Bill Clinton caught the most attention, partly because Comer has repeatedly made it clear that the former president sits at the center of the committee’s current questions. Comer previously stated that Bill Clinton is “a prime suspect” in the ongoing inquiry involving Epstein’s orbit, and he has vowed to obtain answers about Clinton’s well-documented trips to Epstein Island.
Those concerns only grew after Rep. Luna dropped her explosive update this week.
“Bill and Hillary Clinton are refusing to appear before House Oversight for their depositions regarding Jeffrey Epstein. Notice how House Democrats suddenly have nothing to say about it,” she wrote on X.
The refusal immediately ignited outrage among conservatives who argue that any other American would be held in contempt for ignoring a congressional subpoena. Yet, when the names are “Clinton,” Democrats suddenly fall silent. For many Republicans, this pattern looks less like coincidence and more like political protection.
The Clintons’ relationship with Epstein has been scrutinized for years, especially after flight logs and visitor records began surfacing. Epstein was welcomed into the Clinton White House more than 17 times, and Bill Clinton has publicly acknowledged that he flew on Epstein’s notorious “Lolita Express” plane over 20 times. Critics say these numbers alone justify full transparency — something the Clintons seem determined to avoid.
Now the ball is back in Congress’s court. Lawmakers must decide whether to escalate enforcement, pursue contempt proceedings, or apply new pressure to compel compliance. One thing is certain: with every refusal, every delay, and every unanswered question, the Clinton-Epstein saga grows darker, louder, and harder for Washington’s establishment to ignore.
Republicans say the public deserves the truth — and the Clintons’ refusal to testify may end up being the most revealing clue of all.




