A Republican-led House Oversight Subcommittee just fired a shot across the bow of America’s political elite—voting to subpoena Bill and Hillary Clinton in connection with their alleged ties to Jeffrey Epstein and his convicted accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell.
The motion to subpoena came from Rep. Scott Perry (R-PA) during Wednesday’s Federal Law Enforcement Subcommittee hearing. The move passed by voice vote—no roll call taken—reflecting the growing Republican push to get long-overdue answers. The Clintons aren’t the only big names in the crosshairs. Former top officials from the Justice Department—including ex-FBI Director James Comey, former AGs Loretta Lynch, Eric Holder, Merrick Garland, Bill Barr, Jeff Sessions, and Alberto Gonzales—are also on the list.
Former special counsel Robert Mueller was named too.
The subpoenas are tied to a broader effort to expand the committee’s investigation into Ghislaine Maxwell and her network—one that’s haunted the nation’s conscience for years. For these subpoenas to become legally binding, House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) will need to formally issue them. But this latest move signals a clear shift: the days of political privilege shielding powerful figures from accountability may be nearing an end.
This renewed scrutiny isn’t coming out of thin air. Former President Bill Clinton himself admitted in his 2024 book Citizen: My Life After the White House that he flew on Epstein’s infamous private jet—nicknamed the Lolita Express—as part of Clinton Global Initiative activities.
“I wish I had never met him,” Clinton wrote, claiming the relationship was “not worth the years of questioning afterward.”
But for many Americans, those questions are far from answered.
Records show Epstein visited the White House at least 17 times during Clinton’s early presidency—a fact that’s raised more than a few eyebrows and left a trail of doubts that can’t simply be brushed off by carefully crafted memoir lines.
Meanwhile, Ghislaine Maxwell—convicted in 2021 of trafficking minors and other federal crimes—sits behind bars serving a 20-year sentence. Yet key pieces of the puzzle remain sealed, buried in bureaucratic silence. That may change soon.
In a significant development, the Department of Justice just filed a motion to unseal grand jury testimonies connected to Epstein’s criminal indictment. According to court documents filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York:
“At the direction of the Attorney General, the Department of Justice hereby moves the Court to release grand jury transcripts associated with the above referenced indictment.”
The motion, submitted by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, follows mounting public pressure for transparency—especially in light of Epstein’s highly suspicious death and the unanswered questions still surrounding his network of powerful associates.
For conservatives, this moment is about more than scandalous headlines—it’s about restoring accountability in a system where political elites too often operate with impunity. It’s about ensuring that no one—not even former presidents or Justice Department brass—gets a pass when children were exploited, victims were silenced, and justice was delayed.
The American people have waited long enough. Now it’s time for answers.














Better get that I Plead the 5th Amendment Rubber Stamp out and have plenty of ink for it.