Epstein Inquiry Continues: Bill Clinton Testifies This Morning

Bill Clinton, the 42nd President of the United States who oversaw the country’s longest peacetime economic expansion and is the first former president ever to be deposed by Congress in connection with the investigation involving Jeffrey Epstein.

By Gina Hill | Alaska Headline Living | February 2026

Former President Bill Clinton testified this morning in Chappaqua, New York, before the United States House Committee on Oversight and Accountability as part of the congressional investigation into activities connected to Jeffrey Epstein.

Investigators have said they are reviewing historical records, travel information, photographs, and other materials appearing in publicly released Epstein-related files. The purpose of the inquiry is to determine whether additional information is available about the scope of Epstein’s network.


Opening Statement Summary

Prior to his deposition, Clinton released a prepared opening statement publicly.

In the statement, Clinton said he had no knowledge of Epstein’s criminal activities. He stated that his interactions with Epstein were limited and ended long before Epstein’s crimes became publicly known.

Clinton emphasized that he grew up around domestic abuse and would have reported suspicious behavior if he had seen any indication of wrongdoing. He also rejected retrospective interpretation of decades-old photographs and said he would not speculate about events that occurred more than twenty years ago.

Clinton further stated that he believed the investigation should focus on truth-seeking rather than partisan spectacle and that he was answering questions under oath.

The statement also addressed the decision to depose former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, saying she had no connection to Epstein, no memory of meeting him, and no record of traveling with him.

The following pages show portions of the prepared deposition opening statement submitted by Bill Clinton before his testimony before the House Oversight Committee.

Opening page of the prepared deposition statement submitted by Bill Clinton to congressional investigators regarding the inquiry involving Jeffrey Epstein.

Second page of the prepared opening statement from Bill Clinton reviewed as part of the congressional deposition process.

Public Debate and Investigation Scope

The inquiry has drawn broad national attention because of the high-profile witnesses involved.

Some Americans have asked whether investigative standards should be applied consistently if other public figures are believed to possess relevant information.

Public discussion has occasionally included whether Donald Trump or Melania Trump should be evaluated under similar standards. No official deposition announcements have been made regarding them.

Holiday reception hosted by Donald Trump and Melania Trump. Publicly released records connected to Jeffrey Epstein reference multiple public figures, including the Trumps, though no allegations have been proven.
Credit: White House Archives

Publicly released investigation materials reference multiple individuals connected in various ways to the case, though no criminal allegations have been proven against any of the public figures mentioned.


What Happens Next

The committee will review deposition transcripts, video recordings, and documentary evidence gathered during the sessions. Legal analysts expect future investigative work may focus on correlating testimony with historical travel records, communications data, and organizational materials associated with Epstein’s activities.

If the committee determines additional testimony is needed, additional subpoenas or depositions could follow.

Americans who want to follow committee activity can review membership information and investigation updates here: Oversight.House.Gov.


House Oversight Committee Membership

The investigation is being conducted by the members of the committee listed below.

NamePartyState / District
James ComerRepublicanKentucky-01 (Chairman)
Robert GarciaDemocratCalifornia-42 (Ranking Member)
Jim JordanRepublicanOhio-04
Michael R. TurnerRepublicanOhio-10
Paul GosarRepublicanArizona-09
Virginia FoxxRepublicanNorth Carolina-05
Glenn GrothmanRepublicanWisconsin-06
Michael CloudRepublicanTexas-27
Gary PalmerRepublicanAlabama-06
Clay HigginsRepublicanLouisiana-03
Pete SessionsRepublicanTexas-17
Andy BiggsRepublicanArizona-05
Nancy MaceRepublicanSouth Carolina-01
Pat FallonRepublicanTexas-04
Byron DonaldsRepublicanFlorida-19
Scott PerryRepublicanPennsylvania-10
William TimmonsRepublicanSouth Carolina-04
Tim BurchettRepublicanTennessee-02
Lauren BoebertRepublicanColorado-04
Anna Paulina LunaRepublicanFlorida-13
Nick LangworthyRepublicanNew York-23
Eric BurlisonRepublicanMissouri-07
Eli CraneRepublicanArizona-02
Brian JackRepublicanGeorgia-03
John McGuireRepublicanVirginia-05
Brandon GillRepublicanTexas-26
Eleanor Holmes NortonDemocratWashington, D.C.
Stephen LynchDemocratMassachusetts-08
Raja KrishnamoorthiDemocratIllinois-08
Ro KhannaDemocratCalifornia-17
Kweisi MfumeDemocratMaryland-07
Shontel BrownDemocratOhio-11
Melanie StansburyDemocratNew Mexico-01
Maxwell FrostDemocratFlorida-10
Summer LeeDemocratPennsylvania-12
Greg CasarDemocratTexas-35
Jasmine CrockettDemocratTexas-30
Emily RandallDemocratWashington-06
Suhas SubramanyamDemocratVirginia-10
Yassamin AnsariDemocratArizona-03
Wesley BellDemocratMissouri-01
Lateefah SimonDemocratCalifornia-12
Dave MinDemocratCalifornia-47
Ayanna PressleyDemocratMassachusetts-07
Rashida TlaibDemocratMichigan-12
James WalkinshawDemocratVirginia-11

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