Overview
- House Oversight set Hillary Clinton’s testimony for Feb. 26 and Bill Clinton’s for Feb. 27, with transcribed, videotaped depositions after weeks of negotiations.
- Speaker Mike Johnson said efforts to hold the Clintons in contempt are on pause, and the panel’s chair James Comer framed the sessions as part of broader accountability.
- The DOJ has published more than three million pages, about 2,000 videos and roughly 180,000 images, including a nearly two‑hour Epstein interview where he calls himself a “Level 1” sex offender and denies having “dirty” money.
- Some newly posted records were temporarily withdrawn for privacy review after redaction flaws, even as the files revive criticism of the 2006 Acosta plea deal that curtailed a fuller federal case.
- Released emails and references touch tech, business and political figures, including a note about a 2015 dinner with Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, Peter Thiel and Reid Hoffman; named parties have denied wrongdoing, and Bill Gates’ team rejected Epstein’s unverified claims as false while Melinda French Gates urged answers.