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Former President Bill Clinton told a congressional panel he "saw nothing," and "did nothing wrong" in relation to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The all-day hearing behind closed doors in New York featured the former president being asked about his inclusion in newly released files related to the financier.

Former US President Bill Clinton faced a grueling closed-door congressional deposition, vehemently denying any knowledge of the late financier Jeffrey Epstein's sprawling sex trafficking syndicate.
In a historic and highly scrutinized appearance before the House Oversight Committee in New York, Bill Clinton stated unequivocally that he "saw nothing" and "did nothing wrong" during his past associations with Jeffrey Epstein. The testimony marks a critical juncture in the ongoing, multi-year effort to untangle the web of high-profile global elites connected to the disgraced late billionaire.
For international observers, including political analysts in Nairobi monitoring US governance and accountability structures, the spectacle of a former head of state being compelled to testify under oath underscores the deep, persistent shockwaves of the Epstein scandal. The proceedings highlight a global demand for transparency that transcends borders and executive privilege.
During the six-hour deposition, lawmakers zeroed in on a recently unsealed photograph depicting the former president lounging in a hot tub alongside an unidentified young woman. The image, which went viral following the declassification of millions of pages of DOJ documents, has fueled rampant public speculation regarding the nature of Clinton's relationship with Epstein's inner circle.
Under intense questioning, Clinton maintained that he did not know the identity of the woman in the photograph and categorically denied having sexual relations with her. Sources close to the proceedings indicated that Clinton suggested the image was taken in a public hotel setting, pushing back against insinuations of illicit activity.
In his prepared opening remarks, the 42nd President of the United States sought to establish a definitive firewall between his social interactions and Epstein's criminal enterprise. "No matter how many photos you show me, I have two things that, at the end of the day, matter more than your interpretation of those 20-year-old photos," Clinton declared. "I know what I saw, and more importantly, what I didn't see."
Bill Clinton's testimony arrived a mere 24 hours after his wife, former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, faced the same committee. She echoed a similar defense, asserting she had absolutely no knowledge of the abuses perpetrated by Epstein or his convicted accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell. Bill Clinton utilized his platform to fiercely defend his wife, lambasting the Republican-led committee for dragging her into the fray.
"You made Hillary come in. She had nothing to do with Jeffrey Epstein. Nothing," he asserted, framing the subpoenas as a politically motivated weaponization of the investigative process.
While the former president has not been accused of any direct criminal misconduct by Epstein survivors, his documented proximity to the trafficker—including numerous flights and social engagements—continues to cast a long, inescapable shadow over his legacy.
Clinton concluded his testimony by releasing a public video statement, urging other individuals connected to the case to come forward and cooperate with congressional investigators. He called upon the Justice Department to fully unseal all remaining documents, stating that the survivors of Epstein's abuse deserve absolute clarity.
As the political theater subsides, the core question remains: how did a prolific predator operate so openly among the world's most powerful figures without triggering alarms? The answers remain elusive, buried beneath decades of wealth, influence, and carefully constructed plausible deniability.
"I would have turned him in myself," Clinton insisted, a statement that underscores the staggering effectiveness of Epstein's deceptive, high-society camouflage.
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