Key Highlights
- House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., told reporters Wednesday that the Clintons could face contempt charges for not having complied with the call to testify.
- Meanwhile, the Clintons' attorneys criticized Comer's leadership of the investigation in a letter and discounted the subpoenas, saying, "President and Secretary Clinton have already provided the limited information they possess about Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell to the Committee."But some prominent liberal voices have said that it would be better for America as a country if the Clintons testify "As someone who wants to see everything in the Epstein files and wants every single person held accountable, I think the Clintons should show up," "The View" co-host Sara Haines said.
- "It was a unanimous vote to subpoena them, and regardless of these affidavits or anything else, I think when people don’t show up, it makes them look guiltier than they are." HILLARY CLINTON EXPECTED TO DEFY EPSTEIN PROBE SUBPOENA, RISKING CRIMINAL CHARGES Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her husband, former U. S.
- president Bill Clinton.
- (Justin Sullivan/) "President Clinton has showed up in tons of pictures with no wrongdoing but images that have been released in the files," Haines continued.


